KHARTOUM — Amidst “disturbing reports” from Ethiopians fleeing to Sudan, the UN refugee agency called on Friday for “unfettered access to Tigray in order to reach people in need”.
Babar Baloch, the spokesperson for the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), repeated the joint UN call for all parties to “allow freedom of movement to affected civilians seeking assistance, safety and security within the Tigray region or outside the affected areas”.
“This includes respecting and upholding the right to cross international borders to seek asylum”, he told journalists in Geneva.
A government offensive began on Nov. 4 after forces loyal to the ruling Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) reportedly attacked a federal military base.
While those escaping from the northern region have been trending downward to under 500 per day, more recent groups coming from areas deeper inside Tigray, are sharing “harrowing accounts of being stopped by armed groups and robbed of their possessions”, according to the UNHCR spokesperson.
Baloch relayed reports that, arriving weak and exhausted, some refugees had spent “two weeks on the run inside Ethiopia as they made their way to the border”.
Moreover, many had hidden “in fields and bushes to avoid being spotted”.
“Without access in Ethiopia we are unable to verify these disturbing reports”, said the UNHCR spokesperson.
At a press briefing on Monday, Secretary-General António Guterres had said that Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed “guaranteed to me that they have not entered Tigrayan territory, that the only area where they are, is the area that corresponded to the disputed territory between the two countries” that, in the peace agreement, it was decided, would be returned to Eritrea.
However, according to news reports, while Ethiopia’s government said its completed military offensive against the Tigray regional government’s leaders did not threaten Eritrean refugees, international aid groups said four of their staffers had been killed, at least one in a refugee camp there.
“We have seen increasing requests for family tracing, as many were separated at the start of the conflict or during flight and have not been able to get in contact since”, said the UNHCR spokesperson.
“More medicines are needed, especially for those who were taking chronic medication for diabetes, HIV and other illness”, he added.
UNHCR and its partners also need support to prevent COVID-19 outbreaks among the refugees living in overcrowded conditions, including more handwashing stations, PPE kits, and information campaigns.
As of Wednesday, the first of five additional chartered flights began bringing more urgently needed humanitarian supplies into Sudan.
“In total, the airlifts from Dubai and Nairobi will bring in some 3,225 tents, 75,000 blankets, 45,000 sleeping mats, 20,000 solar lamps, 17,000 mosquito nets, and 8,250 plastic sheets”, detailed Mr. Baloch. “With these flights, we have airlifted 440 metric tons of humanitarian relief since Nov. 27”.
And UNHCR also continues to move refugees away from the border with some 14,000 relocated to the Um Rakuba refugee settlement so far.
Along with its partners, the UN refugee agency has appealed for $147 million to cover the needs and to support the government of Sudan, which continues to welcome and host refugees. — UN news