"We
are 100% in control of Mekelle," Getachew Reda, spokesman for
the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF), told Reuters on
Tuesday, referring to the regional capital. There had been some
fighting on the outskirts of the city, but that was now
finished, he said.
“Our forces are still in hot pursuit to south, east, to continue
until every square inch of territory is cleared from the enemy.”
Reuters could not independently verify his statement because
almost all phone links to Tigray are down. But on Monday evening
before phone links went down, residents said soldiers had
disappeared from the streets and TPLF forces entered Mekelle.
Residents greeted them with flags and songs, witnesses said.
A spokeswoman for Ethiopia's prime minister, the head of a
government taskforce on Tigray, an Ethiopian military spokesman
and Eritrea's information minister did not return messages
seeking comment.
The TPLF, an ethnically based political party that dominated
Ethiopia's national politics for nearly three decades, has been
battling the central government since early November and has
made major territorial gains in the past week.
The fighting has forced around 2 million people to flee their
homes and been punctuated by reports of ethnic cleansing, brutal
gang-rapes and mass killings of civilians.
At least 350,000 people are facing famine and 5 million others
need immediate food aid, the United Nations has said - the worst
global food crisis in a decade. The U.N. says government forces
and their allies - forces from Eritrea and the neighbouring
region of Amhara - have repeatedly blocked aid convoys in Tigray.
On Tuesday, residents said Eritrean forces could no longer be
seen in Shire, a large town at the junction of several main
roads.
"There's not a single Eritrean in town," said one resident of
Shire told Reuters. Another resident in Shire told Reuters
"overnight there was a massive movement of troops."
(Additional reporting by Dawit Endeshaw in Addis Ababa and
Maggie Fick in Nairobi;Writing by Katharine Houreld; Editing by
Catherine Evans and Philippa Fletcher)
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