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Ethiopia expels 7 UN aid officials for “meddling in internal affairs”

1 min read
October 1, 2021

On September 30, Ethiopia decided to expel seven United Nations officials, including senior UN humanitarian officials. Few days earlier, the UN aid chief asked the government to stop blocking trucks from delivering aid to the Tigray region.

Trucks carrying humanitarian aid stuck on the road in Ethiopia
Less than 10% of trucks with humanitarian aid can get to the Tigray region. A lot of them don’t come back | © UN Ethiopia

In September, Ethiopia’s Ministry of Foreign affairs said it notified seven United Nations officials to leave the country within 72 hours. They are accused of “meddling in the internal affairs of the country.

One of them is the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) representative in Ethiopia. Six are from the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

The UN Secretary General stated he was shocked by the “information that the Government of Ethiopia has declared seven UN officials, including senior UN humanitarian officials, as persona non grata.

The OCHA regularly updates the situation in the Tigray region, either from weekly Northern Ethiopia Humanitarian Update Situation Reports or Daily Noon Briefing Highlights.

On September 2, the United Nations declared the aid crisis in the area was worsening, with stocks of relief aid, cash and fuel “running very low or depleted.

For the UN, trucks delivering humanitarian aid are denied access to the state Tigray

OCHA repeatedly warned that not enough aid was able to reach the population. Since July 12, only about seven trucks a day got to deliver humanitarian supplies while 100 trucks are needed daily. The organization considers there is a denial of access to the only road access route into Tigray for fuel and medical supplies.

And on September 28, the United Nations aid chief told Reuters his request to the government of Ethiopia was to “get those trucks moving.[…] This is man-made, this can be remedied by the act of government.

Moreover, most trucks sent to the Tigray region don’t come back.

In August, a transcript of the prime minister’s press briefing highlights that “images showing international humanitarian aid agency food items in the hands of terrorists” have surfaced.

The government of Ethiopia considers the Tigray People’s Liberation Front as terrorists. The TPLF contested reforms conducted by the government and the feud became an armed conflict since November 2020. According to the UN, some 1.7 million people face food insecurity in the region.

The United Kingdom, the European Union and Germany condemned the expulsion; The United States said it would not hesitate to use targeted economic sanctions.

On October 1, the UN Security Council discusses the situation in Tigray at the demand of Estonia, France, Ireland, Norway, the United Kingdom, and the United States, according to the Security Council report.

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Clément Vérité

Clément is the executive editor and founder of Newsendip. He started in the media industry as a freelance reporter at 16 for a local French newspaper after school and has never left it. He later worked for seven years at The New York Times, notably as a data analyst. He holds a Master of Management in France and a Master of Arts in the United Kingdom in International Marketing & Communications Strategy. He has lived in France, the United Kingdom, and Italy.