AP News has released a detailed but disturbing report on the Axum massacre. Report contains details of death, violence and images that some may find unsettling
Bodies with gunshot wounds lay in the streets for days in Ethiopia’s holiest city. At night, residents listened in horror as hyenas fed on the corpses of people they knew. But they were forbidden from burying their dead by the invading Eritrean soldiers.
Those memories haunt a deacon at the country’s most sacred Ethiopian Orthodox church in Axum, where local faithful believe the ancient Ark of the Covenant is housed.
As Ethiopia’s Tigray region slowly resumes telephone service after three months of conflict, the deacon and other witnesses gave The Associated Press a detailed account of what might be its deadliest massacre.
The deacon, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he remains in Axum, said he helped count the bodies — or what was left after hyenas fed. He gathered victims’ identity cards and assisted with burials in mass graves.
He believes some 800 people were killed that weekend at the church and around the city, and that thousands in Axum have died in all. The killing continues: On the day he spoke to the AP last week he said he had buried three people.
Axum, with its ancient ruins and churches, holds major significance for the Ethiopian Orthodox faithful, who believe that the Ark of the Covenant, built to hold the tablets inscribed with the Ten Commandments, is located there.
“If you attack Axum, you attack first of all the identity of Orthodox Tigrayans but also of all Ethiopian Orthodox Christians,” said Wolbert Smidt, an ethnohistorian who specializes in the region. “Axum itself is regarded as a church in the local tradition, ‘Axum Zion.’”
Eritrean and Ethiopian soldiers had arrived in Axum more than a week earlier, with heavy bombardment. But on Nov. 28 the Eritrean soldiers returned in force to hunt down members of the local militia who had mobilized against them in Axum and nearby communities.
The deacon recalled soldiers bursting into the church, cornering and dragging out worshippers and shooting at those who fled.
“I escaped by chance with a priest,” he said. “As we entered the street, we could hear gunfire all over.” They kept running, stumbling over the dead and wounded along with others trying to find places to hide.
Most of the hundreds of victims were killed that day, he said, but the shooting and looting continued the following day.
“They started to kill people who were moving from church to home or home to home, simply because they were on the street,” another witness, visiting university lecturer Getu Mak, told the AP. “It was a horrible act to see.” He watched the fighting from his hotel room
“On every corner, almost, there was a body,” he said. “People were crying in every home.”

After the killings in Axum came an uneasy period with soldiers roaming the streets and families searching for loved ones. At night, hyenas descended from nearby hills.
The city began to smell of death as some bodies went untouched for days.

“I saw a horse cart carrying around 20 bodies to the church, but Eritrean soldiers stopped them and told people to throw them back on the street,” said Getu, the university lecturer.
Finally, when the soldiers left the city to pursue other fighters, residents mobilized to bury the bodies, the deacon said.

“We could not do a formal burial,” he said. “We buried them en masse” in graves near the Zion church and others.
Some of the dead were among the hundreds of thousands of people in Tigray displaced by the conflict and not known to Axum residents. Their identity cards were collected in churches, where they await the discovery of loved ones.
Another witness, a 39-year-old who gave only his first name, Mhretab, and escaped weeks ago to the United States, asserted that Ethiopian federal police did nothing to rein in the Eritrean soldiers
“I said to them ’Listen, you’re Ethiopian, they’re destroying Ethiopian cities. How is this possible?‴ Mhretab recalled

”They said ‘What can we do? This shouldn’t have happened from the beginning. This is from above” indicating that it had been decided by senior officials
He said he ferried bodies to a mass grave by the Zion church and estimated that he saw 300 to 400 there.

The deacon believes that the Eritrean soldiers, in their hunt for Tigray fighters, have killed thousands more people in villages outside Axum
“When they fight and lose, they take revenge on the farmers and kill everyone they can find,” he said. “This is what we’ve seen in the past three months.”
“We’re also protecting the church,” he said. “Even now, I’m talking to you from there. We are not armed. What we do is mostly watching. And, of course, praying that God protects us.”

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More from @MapEthiopia

20 Feb
An article by Jan Nyssen, a Belgian physical geographer, and professor of geography at Ghent University, on the ongoing war and its impact on civilian life in Tigray

ethiopia-insight.com/2021/02/19/cat…
"Ever since I started research in Tigray in 1994, the fight against famine has been a major priority. With academic colleagues, we tried to assist through studies and projects for environmental conservation. But now, it feels as though we are back to square one" he says
From February to May 2021, more than half of Tigray’s territory is expected to suffer “Emergency” outcomes by the U.S.’s Famine Early Warning System Network—the last stage before “Famine.
Read 30 tweets
19 Feb
An article from the Telegraph on the Debre Abay massacre. As most of you are aware, the article contains disturbing material (mentions of violence, etc)

telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/02/1…
Chatting as they wander through the aftermath of what appears to be a mass execution of civilians in the Tigray region, soldiers laugh and joke among themselves.
Off to one side they spot a young man who seems to have survived by pretending to be dead.
“You should have finished off the survivors,” the cameraman says in Amharic, Ethiopia’s lingua franca

Around 40 bodies in civilian clothes can be seen in the four-minute clip.
Read 14 tweets
18 Feb
Disturbing video from Adwa shows summary executions of two men in civilian clothing. The first video records gunfire and shows dirt kicked up from behind a wall while civilians and armed men in Ethiopian uniform look on.
The second clip shows armed men in Ethiopian uniform forcing civilians to move the bodies away from the main road. Threatening them and instructing them to drop the bodies and return when they deem the dead men are far enough off the road.
The third clip shows the civilians walking away and the executed men laying in the dirt. The soldiers huddle around a man who seems to be patching a wound. At the end of the video, one of the civilians is called back to the group of soldiers.
Read 5 tweets
8 Feb
Comprehensive thread on an apparent mass-execution of 14 men in Debre Abay. This thread will be extremely graphic! Please be warned.
On January 12, the pro-TPLF site Tghat posted about two separate massacres. One of which they claimed killed 100 in Debre Abay on the 5 and 6 of January. Just over a month ago. However, it was impossible to verify the claim due to the internet situation. tghat.com/2021/01/12/mas…
Yesterday, footage finally came out which confirms that a massacre did take place in Debre Abay. From this point on, the thread will be very graphic as we will examine the video. Below is the video in its entirety. Again. Extremely graphic.
Read 13 tweets
7 Feb
Pictures have emerged showing the living conditions of IDPs in Shire. The living conditions are visibly poor. Lack of water, food, healthcare, sanitation facilities and malnutrition is rampant

The IDPs are living in an abandoned construction site which is unsafe and dangerous
IDPs at Shire campus (Aksum University)

-more than 40,000 IDPs with around 6000 under 5 years old
-more than 400 pregnant and lactating mothers
-more than 800 with diabetes, hypertension, epilepsy,
bronchial asthma or HIV. Seven of them have died.
-200 disabled and 600 elderly
At the IDP site (abandoned building)
-no organization or UN agency to coordinate+support the people
-only 20 kg of wheat was supplied to family heads for the last 3 months
- poor sanitation facilities with large-scale open defecation and many people with diarrhea
Read 6 tweets

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