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Deputy U.N. Chief Left near Tears by Rape Accounts in Ethiopia

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By Tolulope Dolapo Thomas

Deputy U.

N.

Secretary-general, Amina Mohammed said on Friday she was deeply shaken by accounts of rape from Ethiopian women, which she described as “your worst nightmare.


Speaking to reporters in New York a day after returning from Ethiopia, Mohammed said she had been left near tears while hearing what the women had experienced, which included gang rape and rape in front of children.

She called for accountability for atrocities committed against women and recounted sights of famine in the crisis-torn country.

“In your worst nightmares you cannot imagine what has happened to the women in Ethiopia, she said of the ‘incredibly emotional’ visit.

It is going to be a lifelong healing process for many, many women and children in Ethiopia.


War erupted in Ethiopia’s Tigray in November 2020, pitting the Ethiopian government and its allies, including Afar troops, against forces loyal to the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, TPLF, which controls the region.

All sides fighting in the war committed violations that may amount to war crimes, according to a joint investigation by the United Nations and Ethiopia published in November.

The report accuses all sides of torturing and killing civilians, carrying out gang rapes and making arrests on the basis of ethnicity.

“Everyone to blame … they were committed across the borders and regions,” Mohammed said on Friday.

“Without a shadow of a doubt, justice and accountability has to be had.


The government has said it has prosecuted individual soldiers, although it has provided no details, while the TPLF has said any soldiers found guilty would be punished.

The conflict has also been compounded by drought, which has left several hundred thousand people in Tigray suffering.

‘I saw famine.


“There’s clearly malnutrition, many, many diseases.


Deputy U.

N.

Chief Left near Tears by Rape Accounts in Ethiopia
Deputy U.

N.

Secretary-general, Amina Mohammed said on Friday she was deeply shaken by accounts of rape from Ethiopian women, which she described as “your worst nightmare.


Speaking to reporters in New York a day after returning from Ethiopia, Mohammed said she had been left near tears while hearing what the women had experienced, which included gang rape and rape in front of children.

She called for accountability for atrocities committed against women and recounted sights of famine in the crisis-torn country.

“In your worst nightmares you cannot imagine what has happened to the women in Ethiopia, she said of the ‘incredibly emotional’ visit.

It is going to be a lifelong healing process for many, many women and children in Ethiopia.


War erupted in Ethiopia’s Tigray in November 2020, pitting the Ethiopian government and its allies, including Afar troops, against forces loyal to the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, TPLF, which controls the region.

All sides fighting in the war committed violations that may amount to war crimes, according to a joint investigation by the United Nations and Ethiopia published in November.

The report accuses all sides of torturing and killing civilians, carrying out gang rapes and making arrests on the basis of ethnicity.

“Everyone to blame … they were committed across the borders and regions.

Without a shadow of a doubt, justice and accountability has to be had.

” Mohammed said on Friday.

The government has said it has prosecuted individual soldiers, although it has provided no details, while the TPLF has said any soldiers found guilty would be punished.

The conflict has also been compounded by drought, which has left several hundred thousand people in Tigray suffering.

‘I saw famine.

’ “There’s clearly malnutrition, many, many diseases.

” she said.

 
 
Reuters/Shakirat Sadiq
Deputy U.

N.

Chief Left near Tears by Rape Accounts in Ethiopia

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About Tolulope Dolapo Thomas

Tolulope Dolapo Thomas, BSc, is a Public Health Educator and Broadcast Journalist with extensive experience in radio and television. She specializes in Health Promotion, Sexual and Reproductive/Fertility Health, and Environmental Health. Certified in CPR and First Aid, Tolulope is passionate about empowering women through evidence-based public health education, fertility awareness, and community sensitization. She is currently pursuing an MSc in Public Health and is the founder of Everywoman Health by TD, a women-focused health platform dedicated to providing accurate, accessible, and trustworthy guidance for women at every stage of life.