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Ethnic Cleansing and Crimes Against Humanity in Ethiopia’s Western Tigray Zone

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What is Happening in Ethiopia’s Western Tigray Zone?

Many reports of ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity have emerged in Ethiopia’s Western Tigray zone. The Ethiopian civil war is now entering its 16th month of brutal conflict. Under the rule of the Prime Minister of Ethiopia, Abiy Ahmed, the Ethiopian military, ethnic militias and Eritrean troops are fighting to oust the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (T.P.L.F.) from Western Tigray.

Mr Abiy tried diminishing the T.P.L.F.’s power and influence which has dominated Ethiopian politics for almost thirty years. The prime minister declared a state of emergency in November 2020 when Tigrayan fighters surged toward the capital in revolt against the government. Nevertheless, Mr Abiy forced the Tigrayans back to their northern homeland, but the conflict continued. Armed forces from the neighbouring Amhara region, who entered Tigray to support Mr Abiy, are “deliberately and efficiently rendering Western Tigray ethnically homogeneous through the organized use of force and intimidation”.

Also Read: Ethiopian Crisis: What is Behind the Worsening Humanitarian Crisis?

Killings, Rape and Crimes Against Humanity in Western Tigray Zone

Armed forces have been waging a campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Tigrayans. Furthermore, Ghent University has estimated that more than half a million people died in the war. Furthermore, more than two million people are displaced, pushing parts of the region into famine-like conditions. Ethiopian authorities have severely restricted access and independent scrutiny of the region, which has resulted in any reports of ethnic cleansing mainly kept concealed.

Furthermore, these widespread human rights violations include killings, rape, mass detentions, and forcible transfers. In April 2022, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch (H.R.W.) stated in a joint report that these abuses amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity. This comprehensive report contains information from 427 interviews with survivors, family members and witnesses. In addition, the World Health Organization’s Director-General, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, an Ethiopian, stated that there is “nowhere on earth where the health of millions of people is more under threat than in the Tigray region”.

Also Read: Ethiopian Crisis: What is Behind the Worsening Humanitarian Crisis?

What is ‘Ethnic Cleansing’?

International human rights law for not formally define ethnic cleansing. However, the United Nations Commission of Experts investigated violations of international humanitarian law in the former territory of Yugoslavia. During this investigation, ‘ethnic cleansing’ was described as a “purposeful policy designed by one ethnic or religious group to remove the civilian population of another ethnic or religious group from certain geographic areas by violent and terror-inspiring means.”

The United Nations consistently uses ‘ethnic cleansing’ in resolutions, reports, judgments and indictments of individuals accused before international courts and tribunals.

Ethnic Cleansing in Western Tigray Zone

Hundreds of Thousands Expelled From Their Homes in Western Tigray Zone

Amhara forces, militias, and recently appointed authorities began a coordinated campaign of ethnically targeted persecution against the Tigrayans in late 2020. Moreover, Tigrayans were instructed to leave through signs posted across the Western Tigray zone. Shockingly, 24-hour or 72-hour ultimatums to leave or be killed were issued to local civilians forcing thousands of Tigrayans into long-term overcrowded detention centres. Additionally, human rights groups believe that thousands remain in these centres facing life-threatening circumstances. There are reports of security forces using gang rape, abduction, sexual slavery and physical and verbal abuse against Tigrayans.

wo displaced Ethiopian women live in a tent after being forced to flee their homes in the Western Tigray region due to ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity.
Caption: Two displaced Ethiopian women live in a tent after being forced to flee their homes in the Western Tigray region due to ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity.

Ethiopian paramilitaries have systematically expelled several hundred thousand Tigrayan civilians from their homes. There are reports of unlawful killings, sexual violence, arbitrary mass detention, pillage, forcible transfer, and the denial of humanitarian assistance by Amhara forces. The map below shows the region of Western Tigray.

The image depicts a map of the Western Tigray Zone in Ethiopia.
Caption: The image depicts a map of the Western Tigray Zone in Ethiopia.

Moreover, human rights groups have highlighted the Ethiopian government’s complicity in these violations against the Tigrayan people in their recent investigations.

“Ethiopian authorities have steadfastly denied the shocking breadth of the crimes that have unfolded and have egregiously failed to address them”

Kenneth Roth, Director of Human Rights Watch.

Tigrinya Language Banned Across Western Tigray Zone

Since November 2020, there has been a ban on the Tigrinya language across the Western Tigray zone. Signs across the region tell locals that they must speak Amharic. This can be difficult for Tigrayans when dealing with administrative work or accessing essential services. Tigrinya music is prohibited, and Amhara forces physically beat those who use this language for any purpose.

New Identification Cards Issued and Personal Documents Confiscated

The Amhara region has selectively issued new identification cards across Western Tigray. Consequently, this has limited the rights of those who have not received a new card. Hence, many Tigrayans are refused identity cards, as authorities claim “they do not deserve it”. The new identification cards grant civilians free movement throughout the region. Additionally, they provide access to essential services and the right to submit complaints. Many locals have no access to life-saving health services and medicines due to these discriminatory restrictions imposed.

Also Read: Ethiopia: millions still cut-off from the urgent humanitarian aid.

Therefore, this is the Amhara forces’ way of forcibly removing the Tigrayan civilian population from the Western Tigray region. Hence, Amhara forces confiscated and destroyed many of the Tigrayans’ documents. This severely hinders Tigrayans’ ability to access services and continue to live everyday life in the region. Amhara forces are implementing these measures of ‘ethnic cleansing’ to support Mr Abiy in his pursuit of eliminating the T.P.L.F. and the Tigrayan ethnicity from the region.

Dozens of Civilians Killed by Suspected Crimes Against Humanity

The Ethiopian government has carried out many airstrikes killing thousands of people throughout the conflict. In January 2022, an airstrike hit a school compound at Dedebit, where thousands of displaced Tigrayans were staying. There were no signs of military targets at the compound, which strongly implies that this was not an accidental attack. The airstrike killed 57 civilians, mainly women, children and older adults, sleeping in tents.

The number of government airstrikes in Tigray increased dramatically in December 2021. Approximately 304 people died and 373 injured in attacks between November 2021 and February 2022. Any violations of the laws of war committed with deliberate or reckless criminal intent are classified as war crimes.

What Happens Next?

H.R.W. has held that the Ethiopian authorities should ensure that humanitarian organizations have immediate access to the region to deliver aid and essential services.

It is imperative to release all those arbitrarily detained and investigate and appropriately prosecute those responsible for abuses such as ethnic cleansing, war crimes and crimes against humanity. If the two parties reach a consensual agreement, then the African Union should deploy international peacekeeping forces to the region to ensure everyone’s safety.

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Same Weapons, Same Wounds: How Israel’s Genocide In Gaza Is Reappearing in Lebanon

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A surgeon can sometimes read a battlefield from the condition of wounds it leaves behind. In Gaza, doctors have described bodies unimaginably pierced by tiny metal fragments that cause far greater damage than the skin first reveals. Unfortunately, similar injuries are now being reported in Lebanon. Although the place has changed, the pattern is becoming familiar.

These are small entry wounds, causing deep internal destruction. While civilians are being pulled from rubble, hospitals are overwhelmed, and Israel calls it “security.” Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza has already shown the world what happens when a civilian population is heavily bombed, starved, displaced, and left without a functioning health system.

Lebanon is now witnessing a face of Israel that is not hidden to anyone, as the assault carries many of the same signatures. Although not the same history, geography, or logic, Israel is destroying the conditions of ordinary life and targeting civilian lives as it has been doing in Gaza for years.

The Tungsten Cubes Linking Gaza and Lebanon

One of the most alarming links between Gaza and Lebanon is the use of weapons that release tiny tungsten cubes. These small metal cubes were already seen in Gaza injuries, and these are not just ordinary metal cube fires.

Human Rights Watch also documented similar fragments in Gaza in its 2009 report named “Precisely Wrong.” It found tiny metal cubes, about 3mm on each side, in victims’ bodies and numerous other strike sites. When they brought them into the laboratory, they found that it was tungsten, with traces of nickel and iron. These are usually fired using a Spike Missile.

The real cruelty of this kind of fragmentation is that it is not always visible at first glance. For instance, a person may have small wounds on the outside while the inside of the body is torn apart. These dense metal fragments can rip through organs, blood vessels, nerves, and bone. Especially for children, the elderly, and the people already weakened by hunger or displacement, survival becomes even harder.

Gaza’s Genocide as a Warning

The heinous genocide in Gaza has already shown the full horror of Israel’s cruel methods. Palestinians have been martyred in staggering numbers, entire neighborhoods have been flattened, and families have been buried under concrete.

The suffering did not end with the so-called “ceasefire language.” Even on May 10, 2026, Israeli strikes killed numerous innocent Palestinians. In this context, Gaza’s health officials have highlighted that more than 850 Palestinians have been killed since the ceasefire that was announced in October 2025.

When it comes to the humanitarian figures, the World Food Programme has reported that 1.6 million people, around 77% of Gaza’s population, are facing acute food insecurity. It also includes 100,000 children and around 37,000 pregnant and breastfeeding women. These are not just background statistics but a daily reality of a population being forced to survive without enough food, medicine, shelter, or safety.

Moreover, hospitals in Gaza reflect the same story. Gaza’s entire medical system has been brutally attacked, besieged, deprived of fuel, and overwhelmed by mass injuries. Doctors have performed amputations in absolutely impossible circumstances. Patients have lain on rubble-led floors while premature babies, cancer and dialysis patients, and trauma victims have all been broken by siege and bombardment.

Lebanon Is Seeing the Same Pattern

Unfortunately, Lebanon is now being dragged into the same machinery of destruction. More than 2,700 people had been killed in Lebanon since March 2026, with more than 1.2 million displaced. Israel also struck Beirut even after a ceasefire had been declared, marking a dangerous escalation and exposing how fragile such ceasefires become when Israel continues to reserve the right to bomb.

The strikes have not been limited to empty fields or isolated military positions. On May 9, an Israeli strike on the southern Lebanese town of Saksakiyeh killed at least seven innocent people, including a child, and wounded 15 others. Emergency responders were seen searching through the wreckage.

In addition to that, Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon killed people in Toura and Kfar Chouba, including a paramedic, while residents of villages in Tyre province had received evacuation warnings.

Ceasefire Without Safety

The word “ceasefire” has become painfully empty for many Palestinians and Lebanese civilians. In Gaza, a ceasefire did not stop the genocide, including killing, starvation, or fear. While in Lebanon, a ceasefire has not stopped Israeli strikes, displacement, or the expansion of insecurity.

The United Nations warned Israeli strikes in Lebanon may breach the ceasefire, while Lebanese authorities said nearly 2,500 people had already been killed by late April amid heavy damage to civilian infrastructure.

However, the great imbalance of destruction remains central. Gaza has been turned into rubble. South Lebanon is now facing repeated bombardment, village evacuations, damaged infrastructure, and mass displacement. The same vocabulary appears again and again: “targets,” “militants,” “security,” “precision.” Yet beneath that language are innocent families, children, doctors, drivers, farmers, shopkeepers, and rescue workers.

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38,000 Women and Girls Slaughtered: UN Confirms Gendered Impact of Israel’s Gaza Genocide

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Shockingly, 47 women and girls are being killed in Gaza every single day. A recent UN report mentioned more than 38,000 women slaughtered by Israel during its heinous genocide. Previously, in 2024, the health ministry in Gaza estimated that 70% of those killed in the war were women and children.

Moreover, the impact on Gaza’s healthcare sector is so severe that death figures are hard to evaluate in real terms. This demonstrates the severity of the gender-based violence that Gaza’s residents are enduring, even after the so-called “ceasefire” in 2026.

Impact of Israel’s Genocide on Women and Girls

The UN Women’s report also documents almost 19,000 injured women and girls who have been permanently disabled from their injuries. The Head of Humanitarian Action at UN Women said: “This is the highest percentage in any conflict to date and the highest percentage of women killed in any conflict ever recorded.”

Several medical professionals who have practiced within the Gaza Strip have reported that most of the breastfeeding mothers have not been able to provide breastmilk for their child due to malnutrition, the loss of a loved one, or lack of medical care.

By early 2026, the official figures from the Ministry of Health in Gaza estimate more than 50,000 women have been killed, but this is most likely an underestimation due to the number of people left under rubble.

There is also credible evidence of sexual violence during the genocide. For instance, in a statement issued in 2024, the United Nations’ Special Representative regarding sexual violence during genocide called for an objective investigation of “credible allegations of sexual assault” of Palestinians in detention, including females being detained by the Israelis.

Maternal Health and Obstetric Care

Pregnant women and new mothers in Gaza are facing a severe maternal healthcare crisis. Hospital infrastructure continues to be bombed by Israeli airstrikes, leaving fewer resources available for providing maternal care. Maternal healthcare resources have also been severely limited, as well as the ability to respond to maternal emergencies.

Women who are giving birth to children are being exposed to an increased risk of maternal death. They are giving birth at healthcare centres that have been partially abolished and are unable to provide surgical intervention. Moreover, some hospitals that are still left lack basic tools such as anaesthesia. The World Health Organisation has been reporting that disruption to the delivery of healthcare and access to medical supplies is directly related to the peak hostilities in northern Gaza.

The UNFPA refers to the Gaza Strip as the most dangerous place in the world for a woman to give birth, due to the increase in the rate of infant mortality. It is reported that an average of 15 women give birth to children outside the hospital per week with no assistance, and if a woman can give birth in a hospital:

  • C-sections were being performed without anaesthesia in many places, as reported by MSF staff from field hospitals.
  • There was an increase in maternal deaths due to hospital closures because of a lack of electricity, surgical services, and staff.

Women’s Right to Food, Water, and Shelter in Gaza

The sieges and destruction of the infrastructure create immense problems for women in particular. Women and men have been forced into shelters with abysmal sanitation. Both UNFPA and UN Women have reported the lack of sanitary products, privacy, and safe water for washing in many displacement sites. These are not insignificant aspects, as for protracted displacement, lack of sanitation and hygiene infrastructure leads to illnesses, poor health, and increased vulnerability.

Additionally, numerous impacts have also occurred due to food insecurity. Pregnant and lactating women have been among the first affected by severe malnutrition. Nearly 790,000 women and girls are living with crisis and catastrophic levels of food insecurity, according to UN Women.

Psychological services are also lacking since most people in Gaza suffer from trauma, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). Women who have lost their husbands and multiple members of their families are experiencing major problems with their mental health.

Data Does Not Reveal the Suffering and Trauma of Gaza Women

A young Palestinian girl, Mona, described her mother and sister dying instantaneously due to a bomb, and she found “pieces of their bodies“. She reported herself being completely numb, and stories such as hers occurred throughout Gaza. Hind Rajab, a 5-year-old Palestinian girl, was shot 335 times by an Israeli tank. There are a lot of horrific stories of Gaza women.

In a nutshell, women’s rights in Gaza, broadly construed, have been assaulted not just by violence but by the destruction of mechanisms of health care, legal, and other services. This is the starting point for any objective assessment of this unprecedented genocide. It must be stopped before the atrocities of Israel and its allies start to engulf the entire world.

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Sudan’s War and the Fracturing of the Muslim World: A Crisis Beyond the Headlines

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The situation in Sudan is now more than just another news story. The conflict, which broke out in April 2023, is now in its fourth year and has left tens of thousands dead, more than 14 million people displaced (nearly a quarter of the population), and pushed the country to the brink of famine. But beyond Sudan’s borders, the war is barely making headlines.

What started as an internal power struggle between two generals has descended into a bloody impasse, rending communities, decimating hospitals, and weaponizing food. Behind the conflict, there’s a bigger story: how this overlooked war is revealing the ugly divisions in the Muslim world. Rather than solidarity, we witness vested interests, selective muteness, and an idealised concept of Muslim unity replaced by geopolitics.

Sudan War 2026: What’s Happening?

The Sudanese war is a battle between two armies:

  • General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan’s Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF)
  • General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo’s Rapid Support Forces (RSF), also known as “Hemedti.”

The RSF controls most of Darfur and Kordofan, and has solidified its control in most of Khartoum and its surroundings. Contrarily, the SAF controls the north and some of the east, and recently began counterattacks in Omdurman. Both sides are far from victory and the peace table. Humanitarian assistance is being looted and stolen. Furthermore, rape is being reported at a “catastrophic” rate.

  • There are more than 4.4 million refugees in neighbouring nations like Chad, South Sudan, and Egypt.
  • Over 21 million people are in need of humanitarian aid because of famine or malnutrition in areas such as El Fasher and Kadugli.
  • Hospitals and humanitarian assistance are also heavily affected by the conflict with the World Health Organization (WHO) reporting over 200 hospital attacks during the war.

What Caused the Civil War in Sudan?

There are three primary causes behind this unfortunate crisis as follows:

Competition and Conflict among Factions

The military forces in Sudan removed President Omar al-Bashir from power and established a transitional government council made up of two opposing armies, as mentioned earlier. The leaders of these two forces colluded to delay power to a civilian government in 2021, staging a coup.

Political Instability after Regime Change

A short-lived democracy ensued after the revolution of 2019. There were no leaders, parties were torn, and the international community was silent. When Bashir was pushed aside, institutions were filled with armed groups with guns and money.

Economic and Regional Inequalities

Sudan has a long history of disparities. There have been instances of discrimination and attacks on regions, such as Darfur. The poor areas suffered from inflation and a resource war, which ultimately divided Sudan.

Sudan has many resources, such as gold in Darfur and a beautiful Nile Valley. RSF had support in Darfur, whereas SAF in the north and east, as previously highlighted.

Who’s Financing the Conflict?

The other question is who finances the war in Sudan. This is a mixture of domestic and international sources.
Funding sources include:

  • Natural resource funding: The RSF owns many of the gold mines that give it enough resources to fight.
  • Regional Powers: Some states are secretly helping SAF against the massive forces of RSF.

In short, the RSF is suspiciously linked with the United Arab Emirates, which is allegedly involved in arms and gold smuggling in Darfur. However, the UAE denies military aid, but is being sued by Sudan in the International Court of Justice. The RSF has mining profits and a government of the occupied territory.
On the other hand, SAF has Egypt, the Nile, and the border. The legitimate government has the backing of Saudi Arabia and others.

Sudan and the Muslim World in Crisis

The Muslim world has been facing a multi-faceted crisis for the past two years that has similar patterns. There has been international intervention on a scale, wars for resources, failed or failing states, and the international community is divided to tackle the crises. Rather than consensus, there is disunity and division.

The nature of these crises is different, but the common thread is that there is no unity among Muslim-majority countries and organisations.

  • Israel is currently involved in genocidal activities like bombing and starving Gaza. The agreement between Lebanon and Israel was supposed to be kept, yet Lebanon remains vulnerable to attacks and is displaced from reconstruction.
  • Iran is recovering from the war with Israel and the US. It is suffering economically from sanctions, attacks, and trade issues.
  • Yemen and Syria continue to suffer from war, while Pakistan and Bangladesh have experienced political upheaval.

However, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation has been unable to respond significantly to any of these events.

The Way Forward

Peace involves putting an end to combat and the cessation of fighting between opponents and allowing them to embrace reconciliation. The international community must adopt a new approach to the problem that would involve fewer arms and increased humanitarian aid.

Gaza and Sudan represent a case of uneven consensus among the Muslims. It is therefore the need of the hour to tackle all the challenges with the strong and practical notion of the Muslim Brotherhood.

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