First NGO aid convoy arrives in capital of Ethiopia's Tigray region
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[December 12, 2020]
ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - The first
non-governmental aid convoy since fighting erupted last month has
arrived in the capital of Ethiopia's northern region of Tigray carrying
desperately needed medicines and other items, the international Red
Cross said on Saturday.
The government restricted access to the region after fighting began on
Nov. 4 between the government and a rebellious regional force. The
conflict in Africa's second-most populous nation is believed to have
killed thousands of people and displaced around 950,000.
The United Nations and other agencies have not been able to deliver aid
although the government says it has sent food and other supplies.
The convoy of seven white trucks that arrived in the city of Mekelle was
organised by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the
Ethiopian Red Cross, the ICRC said.
Healthcare facilities in Mekelle have been paralysed after supplies of
drugs and other medical items like surgical gloves ran out, the ICRC
said. Ayder Hospital, the region's main referral hospital, was forced to
shut its intensive care unit and surgical theatre because of the
shortages and an inability to run the generator.
“Doctors and nurses have been ... weeks without new supplies, running
water, and electricity,” said Patrick Youssef, the ICRC's regional
director for Africa. “This medical shipment will inject new stocks, help
patients, and reduce those impossible life-or-death triage decisions.”
The government says it has defeated forces loyal to the region's former
ruling Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF), and struck a deal with
the United Nations to allow aid.
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Ethiopians who have just crossed a river from Ethiopia to Sudan to
flee from the Tigray region, walk towards the Hamdeyat refugees
transit camp, which houses refugees fleeing the fighting, on the
border in Sudan, December 1, 2020. REUTERS/Baz Ratner/File Photo
But some aid agencies and donors say the agreement is too
restrictive and security remains a problem; one U.N. security team
was shot at last weekend.
Nearly 50,000 refugees have crossed into eastern Sudan since early
November. Nearly 15,000 are at Um Rakuba camp, where long lines of
people waited for food with plates in their hands and new arrivals
constructed shelters using tree branches.
"We don't have enough food or shelter here, but I am too scared to
go back," said Tewelo Gabrageres, 35-year-old trader.
(Reporting by Addis Ababa Newsroom; Writing by Duncan Miriri;
Editing by Frances Kerry)
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