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Ethiopia's Amhara militia states resettlement strategy 'beats war drum'

Leaders of a militia in Ethiopia's Amhara region accused the administration in neighbouring Tigray of beating a war drum over plans to return hundreds of countless Tigrayans to areas Amhara fighters captured during a civil war.

The future of the disputed territories in northern Ethiopia has stayed a flashpoint between Tigray and Amhara considering that the end of a 2020-2022 civil war, in which Amhara militiamen combated alongside the federal government against Tigrayan rebels.

Hundreds of thousands were eliminated in the war. Some of the worst violence was in the two areas, which make up the southern and western parts of Tigray under the federal constitution. Numerous thousands of ethnic Tigrayans fled, and Amhara fighters set up their own governing administration.

The vice president of Tigray's interim administration, General Tadesse Worede, said on Wednesday that Tigrayan officials had actually agreed with the federal government to finalise prepare for the return of displaced people - by June 7 for one area and July 7 for the other.

Contenders in the location will be disarmed and new regional governing administrations produced, Tadesse stated. The federal defence minister has actually previously vowed to liquify illegal. administration in these locations.

A federal government spokesperson did not react to a. ask for remark about Tadesse's remarks.

Amhara nationalists say they have a historic right to the. land, and leaders of an Amhara militia referred to as Fano described. Tadesse's comments as justification.

They are beating a war drum. We won't tolerate anybody who. would try to impose force and attack, Beyene Alamaw, a. agent of Fano's branch in the Gondar location, informed an. online media rundown late on Thursday.

Leaders from three of Fano's 4 primary branches were. represented at the briefing.

Last month, in the most significant violence because completion. of the war, clashes erupted between armed Amharas and Tigrayans. in among the challenged areas, forcing around 50,000 people to. get away, according to the United Nations.

Regardless of being allies throughout the Tigray war, Fano militiamen. have actually been fighting the army because last July across Amhara.

The conflict has actually been fuelled in part by a sense of betrayal. amongst lots of Amharas about the regards to the November 2022 peace. offer between the federal government and Tigrayan leaders, which. did not settle the status of the contested areas.

The federal government has promised to hold a referendum on. whether the areas will come from Tigray or Amhara, a position. rejected by Fano.

(source: Reuters)