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PoliticsEthiopia

Is there a chance for peace in the Tigray conflict?

Martina Schwikowski
November 6, 2021

As the war in Ethiopia comes to a head, opponents of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed are forging an alliance for a "safe transition." A national dialogue to provide a way out of the crisis appears to be a distant prospect.

https://p.dw.com/p/42eAE
Ethiopian army special forces and militias grouped around a tank
In mid-October, Ethiopian army special forces were still confident of victoryImage: Seyoum Getu/DW

"The situation in Ethiopia is currently very perilous. This is probably the most dangerous moment in the country for decades," said Murithi Mutiga, International Crisis Group Project Director for the Horn of Africa, based in Nairobi, Kenya. "The primary issue is that all sides have decided that they can settle this conflict militarily."

According to the analyst, the Tigrayan forces have gained strength. "They seem determined and try to make a decisive move that could either lead to the end of the siege in Tigray or to the collapse of the Abiy government," Mutiga told DW.

For its part, the government of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has stepped up its war rhetoric. Facing a possible advance on the capital, Addis Ababa, it is calling for a general arming of the people, as well as for all civilians to join the fight. According to observers, there have been busloads of forcibly recruited teenagers and clampdowns during which Tigrayans still staying in the capital were arrested.

In the meantime, the US special envoy to the Horn of Africa, Jeffrey Feltman, has met with the prime minister in Addis Ababa. "It is essential that he, the AU and possible neighbors, at least get all parties to give talks a chance," said Mutiga.

People sift through wreckage at the scene of an airstrike in Mekele
Mekele, the capital of the Tigray region, has been repeatedly hit by airstrikes Image: AP Photo/picture alliance

Abiy 'can flee and go into exile'

The Ethiopian Army and troops from Tigray siding with the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) party have been battling for the region in the north of the country since last November. Voluntary fighters have joined both sides. In the meantime, the TPLF has received reinforcement from the Oromo Liberation Army (OLA) and claims to have made territorial gains in the course of its advance on the capital.

On Friday, TPLF and OLA announced the formation of an alliance along with seven other opposition groups — with the aim of reversing "the harmful effects of the Abiy Ahmed rule" and precipitating a "safe transition" for the country.

Abiy, who was awarded the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize for his political reforms in Horn of Africa, declared a state of emergency on Tuesday. He labeled TPLF leaders as terrorists, "a cancer," or "weeds." His Facebook post that called on people to "bury" advancing fighters was deleted by the social network on Thursday.

Is there any chance for negotiations between the archenemies? Norwegian peace researcher Kjetil Tronvoll believes there isn't. "There is no negotiated takeover of power. We can expect an ongoing conflict," he told DW.

The TPLF, he added, had no interest in assuming power in Addis Ababa through political means, "but they want to topple Abiy [and achieve] a transitional agreement." Abiy's political career, Tronvoll said, was over. "He can flee and go into exile."

Ethiopian government soldiers ride in the back of a truck
Experts don't believe that a quick solution to the Ethiopian conflict is possibleImage: Ben Curtis/AP Photo/picture alliance

Tigray fighters have will to win

The current fight was no military challenge for the troops of the Tigray regional government — Tronvoll believes they could reach Addis Ababa within a week.

But why has the TPLF campaign been so successful? Abiy, Tronvoll said, made a mistake when he dealt with the national army, which had long been dominated by Tigrayans. "He arrested 17,000 soldiers and officers in the chain of command [of the government army] when he came to power. He incapacitated his own army. [As he is] from the Oromo ethnic group, he could not trust them," he said, adding that there has been a lot of infighting in the Ethiopian National Defense Force.

The troops from Tigray, Tronvoll said, have a stronger fighting morale and the will to win. There is discipline in TPLF troops, who are "highly educated people, not peasants as in the resistance war. Now they are recruiting doctors and high school graduates, and they believe in their course," he said.

In addition, the survival of their families is at stake. In the face of a situation like this, international efforts came too late and, worse still, most diplomats are unfamiliar with the complexity of Ethiopia, with the people, with the sentiment of the parties, said Tronvoll.

Diplomacy has failed, say analysts

Bayisa Wak-Woya, a former UN employee from Ethiopia, also blames a setback in diplomacy. Many diplomats, he said, do not know enough about the different traditions and cultures of the country and were, therefore, failing in their mediation efforts. "It is very difficult to know what is happening at the war front in Ethiopia now," he said. "Transparency is a rare commodity in that country."

He said one thing, however, is certain: "Civil wars are different from wars of aggression." In the former, maintaining the state's sovereignty is a non-argument, he said. "What are human rights violations for some is maintaining law and order for others. This makes it difficult to design a dignified exit [from the fighting] for the parties involved," he said.

A refugee shelter housing internally displaced women and children
Hunger and displacement have aggravated the catastrophic humanitarian situation in TigrayImage: private

What, then, is the way forward? "External powers […] should refrain from taking sides and putting pressure on the parties in the conflict. So far the diplomatic talks failed to bear fruit, because the international community started to condemn parties. Not a good start," said Wak-Woya, who, nonetheless, is still hopeful that peace can be brought to the region.

Considerable efforts are being made to prepare international negotiations, according to people familiar with the situation. But they said discretion is of the essence here, so as not to jeopardize the prospect of successful talks. The inner balance of Ethiopia's immature political system has been in disarray for decades, ethnohistorian Wolbert Smidt, an expert on Ethiopia, told DW.

That disarray, Smidt said, originated in the late 19th century, an era which saw Ethiopia massively expanding into neighboring regions, which were organized in completely different ways with regard to languages, ethnic groups and cultures. Today's conglomerate of regional states is lacking equality on the political level; there are extreme differences in education, wealth, access to power and recognition, according to Smidt.

Time for 'realistic offers to the advancing troops'

One symptom of those long-lasting marginalizations is the current civil war. "Talks must clarify whether there's any common ground left," said Smidt. He believes the government is holding on to its autocratic tendencies. Now, however, clarity about the military situation is paramount, instead of forcing through reforms.

African partners think Ethiopia is tearing itself apart because of these internal contradictions, said Smidt, adding that the time was right for "realistic offers to the advancing troops."

Doctors in Mekele protest against a de facto blockade of medical supplies into Tigray
Doctors in Tigray have protested against a de facto blockade of medical supplies Image: Million Haileselassie /DW

According to Smidt, the only formula for peace is a national dialogue involving all ethnic and regional-political groups. "No reform, no matter how idealistic, can work if you don't integrate stakeholders of central importance," he said.

That political process collapsed years ago. "That means that in the short term, we only have the option of stopping the war, so that a transitional government can be established. It is only on that basis that a longer civil process can be set in motion," he said.

This article has been translated from German