No fewer than 100 former United Nations peacekeepers from Ethiopia have sought asylum in Sudan following hostilities.
The group was part of a recently closed UN mission in Sudan’s Darfur region and had been due to return home.
A local refugee official said the peacekeepers came from Ethiopia’s conflict-hit Tigray region, and feared persecution.
Thousands have been killed in the conflict between Ethiopia’s central government and local forces in Tigray.
It began in November when the government launched an offensive to oust the region’s ruling party from power after its fighters captured federal military bases.
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The Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) had previously had a major dispute with Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed over the future of the country’s ethnically based federal system and its role in government.
There has been increasing concern over allegations of atrocities committed in the Tigray region.
The powerful head of Ethiopia’s Orthodox Church on Saturday accused the government of committing genocide against the Tigrayan people.
‘God will judge everything,‘ said Patriarch Abune Mathias, a Tigrayan, in his first public comments since the war began.
‘I don’t know why they want to wipe the people of Tigray off the face of the earth.’
A UN peacekeeping spokesperson told reporters that 120 former peacekeepers with its now-closed mission in Darfur were seeking international protection and had applied for asylum in Sudan.
The mission, aimed at supporting civilians and helping to mediate Darfur’s years-long conflict, ended in December, and the peacekeepers were due to be repatriated.
The UN refugee agency said the group would instead be ‘taken to a location where they can be safely undertaken for their refugee status to be determined’.
AFRICA TODAY NEWS, NEW YORK