BBC News:
Tigray crisis: Ethiopian soldiers accused of blocking border with Sudan By Anne Soy Senior Africa correspondent – Published The number of refugees fleeing the northern Tigray region of Ethiopia – where federal and regional forces are engaged in fighting – has reduced drastically after soldiers were deployed to the border with Sudan.
The BBC first spotted the soldiers on Wednesday, at the Hamdayet border crossing point, and has been hearing testimonies from refugees who say their relatives are being blocked from leaving Ethiopia.
The Ethiopian government has not responded to repeated BBC requests for comment on the accusation.
Across the river that straddles the border, about a dozen soldiers stand at intervals on hilltops looking in the direction of Tigray.
Boats parked on both sides of what is usually a busy crossing point are largely unused.
Dozens of refugees have gathered to look at the newly deployed federal soldiers on the Ethiopian side of the border.
An information blackout in Tigray has meant that separated families have been unable to communicate.
Human Rights Watch, quoting refugees who have recently arrived in Sudan, has reported that Ethiopian soldiers have been blocking civilians in Humera, about 20km (12.5 miles) from the border, which it says has resulted in “a massive drop in the number of refugees reaching Sudan”.
Father and daughter were reunited at the Um Raquba refugee camp on Wednesday.
Her father, who walked around the camp protectively holding her hand, said she had witnessed people getting shot.
Earth movers have been clearing ground for more construction at the camp, located about 70km from the border.
Many refugees were also busy digging holes in the ground, mounting poles or covering the makeshift structures with wide mats to make new shelters.
“Our humanitarian response is overstretched,” UNHCR said, adding: “Support is urgently needed.”
The Ethiopian government appears keen not only to keep people from fleeing, but also to return any refugees to the country.
After meeting envoys from the African Union on Friday, Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said in a statement that the government was ready to “receive, rehabilitate and resettle citizens that have fled by setting up four camps established to rehabilitate returnees before resettling them back into their original locales”.
Before the offensive was launched on 4 November, the region was already hosting about 100,000 Eritrean refugees in four camps, according to the UNHCR.
“We are very worried,” UNHCR spokesman Babar Baloch said in a statement, while calling for unimpeded access to the camps.
“Rations were provided until the end of November, so it is increasingly critical for humanitarian workers to have access and for additional food to be distributed before refugees run out.”
Then, they could hop onto the almost daily convoys of lorries modified to carry passengers through the rugged terrain in eastern Sudan to refugee camps.
But in the camps, many also hope the crisis will be resolved soon, allowing them to get back to their normal lives – and children like the 11-year-old who travelled alone could return to school or play with their friends.
src : bbc.co.uk