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Food convoy heads to Ethiopia’s Tigray, first since December

ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA (AP) – A convoy of trucks carrying food aid entered territory controlled by fighters loyal to the fugitive leaders of Ethiopia’s Tigray region on Friday, the first humanitarian convoy to do so since December 14, the United Nations (UN) World Food Programme (WFP) said.

The arrival of the trucks came eight days after Ethiopia’s federal government declared an immediate humanitarian truce. The UN estimates that 90 per cent of Tigray’s six million people are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance. It said 100 trucks must enter every day to feed people there.

“WFP-led convoys to Tigray are back on the road and making steady progress,” the agency tweeted. It added that the trucks “arrived in Erepti” carrying over 500 metric tonnes of food supplies “for communities on edge of starvation”. Erepti is a district in the neighbouring state of Afar, into which the war has spilled in recent months. Fighters loyal to the outlawed party of Tigray’s leaders – the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) – are present in six districts in Afar, having entered the region in December.

TPLF spokesman Getachew Reda tweeted that 20 WFP trucks had crossed into territory controlled by their fighters and are now on their way to Mekele, the Tigray capital.

The Tigray fighters had said they would observe the humanitarian truce declared by the government if aid started to reach Tigray.

“This is one good step in the right direction,” Getachew added. “The bottom line isn’t about how many trucks are allowed but whether there is a system in place to ensure unfettered humanitarian access for the needy!”

Ethiopian authorities on Thursday urged humanitarian groups to transport aid supplies by air “as much as possible”.

Government spokesman Legesse Tulu on Friday repeated demands that the Tigray fighters withdraw from the Afar and Amhara regions.

“We call on the international community to put pressure on the TPLF warriors,” he told the Associated Press.

In recent months, some food and nutrition supplies have been flown into Tigray, but these represent a fraction of the region’s needs. Banking services and phone lines also remain down across Tigray.

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