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UNITED NATIONS: About 15 Ethiopian peacekeepers of Tigrayan origin who were due to return home on Monday asked to remain in South Sudan, U.N. officials said, a strong indication they feared going back to Ethiopia where government and allied forces have been fighting forces loyal to Tigrays fugitive leaders.
U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said they were among 169 personnel from the Ethiopian contingent in the U.N. peacekeeping mission scheduled to rotate out of South Sudans capital, Juba. Some 2,100 of the missions 17,200 troops, police and civilians are from Ethiopia.
Were trying to get the details, but I do understand about 15 members of the contingent chose not to board the flight at the Juba airport, Dujarric said. Theyve asked to stay. They are receiving support from the South Sudanese Ministry of Refugee Affairs. The U.N. refugee agency, UNHCR, is in contact with the South Sudanese authorities, he said.
He said the flight left without the peacekeepers who asked to stay.
Dujarric stressed that any person in need of international protection has the right to seek asylum and cannot be returned to their countries of origin if they feel their lives or freedom could be threatened.
Ethiopia is Africas second most populous country and the anchor of the Horn of Africa.
Fighting erupted on Nov. 4 between the federal government and the heavily armed Tigray regional government whose Tigray Peoples Liberation Front dominated Ethiopias ruling coalition for 27 years until the Nobel Peace Prize-winning Abiy prime minister, Abiy Ahmed came to power in April 2018 and introduced dramatic political reforms and sidelined TPLF leaders.
The conflict in Tigray has alarmed the international humanitarian community, as communications have been cut off with large parts of the region.
The United Nations said in a report last week that embattled Tigray faces a very critical malnutrition situation as vast areas where many people fled remain out of reach of aid.
Alarm is growing over the fate of the regions some 6 million people as fighting is reportedly as fierce as ever after three months of fighting. The U.N. refugee agency said more than 50,000 Ethiopians, mainly from Tigray, have fled across the border to Sudan.
Last Friday, the Ethiopian government said humanitarian aid has reached 2.7 million people in Tigray. But the U.N. report calls the current response drastically inadequate, even as some progress is made.
Earlier this month, the Ethiopian Red Cross said some 80% of the population was still unreachable, increasing fears that more people are starving to death.
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