Nigeria’s former President Chief Olusegun Obasanjo on Monday jetted out to Ethiopia to mediate in the conflict between the government and the northern Tigray region, his spokesman said.
‘He is on his way to Addis Ababa for talks,’ Kehinde Akinyemi said while speaking to AFP on the visit of the former Nigerian leader to the Ethiopian capital.
‘He is going there for mediation,’ Akinyemi said, without giving further details.
The report said that both the Ethiopian government and the African Union stated that they had no information on any visit by Obasanjo, who has in the past acted as a United Nations peace envoy in DR Congo.
Ethiopia’s central government announced a military operation in the northern Tigray region on November 4 in a dramatic escalation of a long-running feud with the region’s ruling party, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). The fighting — which has sent thousands fleeing over the border into Sudan — has sparked fears of civil war and concerns it could spread across the region after rockets were fired at an airport in neighboring Eritrea, report says. The attack on Saturday was claimed by TPLF which has accused Eritrea of backing the government.
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The office of Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed on Monday dismissed claims from Ugandan officials that President Yoweri Museveni would meet with representatives of both sides in an effort to facilitate talks.
Ugandan officials told AFP over the weekend those meetings would begin Monday in Uganda and would involve Demeke Mekonnen, Ethiopia’s deputy prime minister and foreign minister.
‘The claims by various news outlets that Ethiopian officials are expected to take part in mediation talks with TPLF in Uganda are inaccurate and not substantiated,’ a government statement said.
Abiy who has resisted calls from world leaders for an immediate end to hostilities previously said that any talks can’t begin until the TPLF is fully disarmed.
AFRICA TODAY NEWS, NEW YORK