Ethiopian premier returns to office after 2 weeks of leading troops on battlefronts

17:068/12/2021, Wednesday
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Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed
Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed

Tigray People's Liberation Front says they left North Shoa, Kombolcha, Dessie as part of plan

Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed on Wednesday returned to his office in Addis Ababa after personally leading the country's armed forces on battlegrounds during the past two weeks.

“PM @AbiyAhmedAli momentarily back to the office following successful completion of the first phase of ‘Operation for National Unity in Diversity',” the prime minister's office tweeted.

A raging war broke out last year in Ethiopia between the government and forces of the Tigray People's Liberation Front, which has left thousands dead, and many more displaced.

Abiy ordered the military offensive against Tigrayan forces on Nov. 4, 2020, after accusing them of attacking a military base.

Fighters from the TPLF had advanced to within 200 kilometers (124 miles) of Addis Ababa. But since the prime minister’s deployment, according to government claims, many strategic areas and major towns have been liberated. It includes the entire Afar regional state, where the TPLF made incursions in a bid to cut off Ethiopia’s main arterial road to Djibouti, through which majority of the Horn of Africa nation’s import-export passes.

Other liberated areas in the Amhara regional state include the UNESCO-registered world heritage town of Lalibella, Gashena, Showa Robit, Debre Sina, Kemissie, Dessie, and Kombolcha, among others.

The TPLF, which governed the country for nearly three decades before being deposed in 2018, however, termed the development strategic retreat.

"We left North Shoa, Kombolcha, and Dessie as part of our plan," a TPLF spokesperson said on Twitter. "... Things are going according to our plan. The rest is just circus ..."

#Ethiopia
#Kombolcha
#Abiy Ahmed