One year after Ethiopia signed a peace deal with the Tigray People's Liberation Front, ending a brutal conflict that killed hundreds of thousands by some estimates, life in the northern region is slowly limping back to normal.Many Tigrayans told AFP they were struggling to find their feet after the November 2022 peace agreement, some losing their homes and livelihoods to the war, others grieving family members killed in the conflict.
Commission Chair Mohamed Chande Othman said that violent confrontations were now “at a near-national scale” and highlighted “alarming” reports of violations against civilians in the Amhara region as well as on-going atrocities.
Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield, U.S. Representative to the United Nations, said Eritrean forces only moved back to the border but still remain in Ethiopia
Most weekdays, it’s common to hear IUS students complain that they’re sick of staring at Subway sandwiches or a Papa John’s personal pizza. Students who excitedly returned to campus this academic year have been sorely disappointed by so few dining options reopening. But it all seems irrelevant when hearing what Shewit Gebreselasei, a sophomore health.