Alarming reports of Eritrean refugees killed in Tigray โ UN โ BBC
The UNโs refugee agency says it is โalarmedโ by reports of attacks on Eritrean refugees in Ethiopiaโs war-torn Tigray region.
A spokesperson for the UNHCRโs Ethiopia office told the BBC they received reports, โfrom online and other sourcesโ, that hundreds of Eritrean refugees in the western town of Shire have allegedly been killedโ.
โWe take these reports very seriously and have immediately reached out to our staff, partners, and Eritrean refugees in Shire,โ Neven Crvenkovic said in an email to the BBC.
โWe have so far not been able to corroborate any of the allegations received but we continue collecting relevant information to help assess the veracity of these reports,โ he added.
Rights activists say they have received reports that many refugees were brutally killed by local militias. But it is difficult to confirm the reports as there is a communication blackout in the region, following the withdrawal of Ethiopian troops from Tigray last week.
โThe primary responsibility of ensuring the security of the camps lies with the authorities, and we continue to liaise with both local authorities and the Ethiopian refugee agency, Arra, to ensure the security and protection of refugees in the camps,โ said the UNHCR.
However, it is not clear how federal authorities can guarantee the safety of the refugees, as they were no longer in Tigray
Around 100,000 Eritreans were in refugee camps when war broke out in Tigray in early November.
Two of the four camps were later discovered destroyed. Many of the more 20,000 refugees who had been sheltered in the camps are still unaccounted for.
Eritrean forces who had been fighting on the side of the Ethiopian government army were accused of kidnapping refugees. Eritrean authorities denied the allegation.
Shimelba and Hitsats camps were located in north-western Tigray, not far from the Eritrean border.
As aid agencies left the camps, the refugees were left with no food and other critical supplies for months.
Some were later able to move to other relatively safer camps in the south-western part of the region.
The UNHCR says land has been allocated in the neighbouring Amhara region to set up a new camp.
There are around 200,000 Eritrean refugees in Ethiopia, according to government reports.
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