SUBSCRIBE NOW

SIGHT

Be informed. Be challenged. Be inspired.

Hunger haunts Ethiopia’s Tigray region after years of war

Mekelle, Ethiopia
Reuters

Curled up on a hospital bed in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region, an emaciated little girl struggles to breathe, as her father softly strokes her gaunt face and her mother sits crying.

Tsige Shishay, whose pink sweater reads “beautiful” on the front, is 10-years-old but weighs just 10 kilograms. Her doctor says she is dying, a new victim of an acute food shortage in a region blighted by two years of war and struggling with drought.

Tsige Shishay, 10, a severely malnourished girl weighing 10 kg due to food aid suspension from the United Nations World Food Program and the US Agency for International Development, lies on her bed next to her mother Abrehet Hadegay, 28, and her father Shishay Asmelash, 40, at the Ayder Referral Hospital in Mekele, Tigray Region, Ethiopia, on 22nd June, 2023.

Tsige Shishay, 10, a severely malnourished girl weighing 10 kg due to food aid suspension from the United Nations World Food Program and the US Agency for International Development, lies on her bed next to her mother Abrehet Hadegay, 28, and her father Shishay Asmelash, 40, at the Ayder Referral Hospital in Mekele, Tigray Region, Ethiopia, on 22nd June, 2023. PICTURE: Reuters/Tiksa Negeri

“We are observing her while she is going, which is painful,” paediatrician Dr Teklay Hagos at Ayder Comprehensive Specialized Hospital in Tigray’s capital Mekelle told Reuters. He spoke in English so her parents would not understand.

Staff at Ayder hospital said eight children died in May.

In late June, a Reuters team made their first trip in two years to Tigray, the epicentre of the conflict. On the four-day trip, they toured Mekelle and two towns, Abiy Addi and Samre, visiting a hospital in each place and camps for the displaced.

Guns fell silent after a November ceasefire following two years of fighting between regional forces and Ethiopia’s federal army with its allies, a conflict that drove people from their homes, destroyed harvests and disrupted food aid.



A persistent drought has deepened the problems.

About a fifth of the six million people in Tigray were severely food insecure in February, the World Food Programme said, in a nation where 20 million people out of a total 120 million population rely on assistance.

Aid flows to Tigray resumed after the November ceasefire but were temporarily halted earlier this year. The WFP and US Agency for International Development (USAID), both major donors, said they had paused flows because some aid was being diverted from those in need.

Ethiopia’s government criticised the halt but said it was investigating the diversion claims. The WFP and USAID said they were working to ensure aid reached the intended recipients and aimed to restart flows as soon as possible. The WFP said it hoped to resume in July.

A mirror reflection shows people displaced due to the fighting between the Tigray People's Liberation Front forces and Ethiopian National Defence Force allied with Amhara Special Forces, inside their shelter at the Abi Adi camp for the Internally Displaced Persons in Abi Adi, Tigray Region, Ethiopia, on 24th June, 2023.

A mirror reflection shows people displaced due to the fighting between the Tigray People’s Liberation Front forces and Ethiopian National Defence Force allied with Amhara Special Forces, inside their shelter at the Abi Adi camp for the Internally Displaced Persons in Abi Adi, Tigray Region, Ethiopia, on 24th June, 2023. PICTURE: Reuters/Tiksa Negeri

Gebrehiwot Gebregziaher, a doctor in charge of the Tigray region for the National Disaster Risk Management Commission, said that, starting from April and May, the commission had received reports from several districts and wards in the northwest, east and south-west zones of Tigray of people dying directly or indirectly from hunger. He said 595 people had died so far.

The commission is a federal body that manages the government’s crisis response.

The Ethiopian Government spokesperson did not respond to a Reuters request for comment on rising levels of hunger in the Tigray region or the resumption of aid flows to the area.

The president of the Tigray interim administration, Getachew Reda, did not respond but said on Twitter on 5th July he had had talks with WFP officials about efforts to resume aid flows.

Woldegebrial Abadi, 36, holds the hands of his severely malnourished newborn son Berhanu Woldegebrial at the Samre Hospital, in Samre, Tigray Region, Ethiopia, on 23rd June, 2023.

Woldegebrial Abadi, 36, holds the hands of his severely malnourished newborn son Berhanu Woldegebrial at the Samre Hospital, in Samre, Tigray Region, Ethiopia, on 23rd June, 2023. PICTURE: Reuters/Tiksa Negeri

In Abiy Addi, about 54 kilometres west of Mekelle, the local social affairs office said the town hosted 51,000 people displaced by fighting. Gebremiskel Gidey, an office official who works at a makeshift camp in a local school, said 118 people there were in critical condition due to malnutrition.

“My boy is hungry now, he is asking me to feed him, but I have nothing left,” said Woldesilassie Gebremedhin, a displaced farmer at the school, gesturing to one of his three children.

He said his wife had already died of hunger, adding: “My wish and my prayer are to not see my children dying before me.”

– Additional reporting by TIKASA NEGERI in Tigray and GIULIA PARAVICINI in Nairobi, Kenya

Donate



sight plus logo

Sight+ is a new benefits program we’ve launched to reward people who have supported us with annual donations of $26 or more. To find out more about Sight+ and how you can support the work of Sight, head to our Sight+ page.

Musings

TAKE PART IN THE SIGHT READER SURVEY!

We’re interested to find out more about you, our readers, as we improve and expand our coverage and so we’re asking all of our readers to take this survey (it’ll only take a couple of minutes).

To take part in the survey, simply follow this link…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

For security, use of Google's reCAPTCHA service is required which is subject to the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.