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    • News
    • Ethiopia

    In Ethiopia's Tigray, only 1% of people needing food aid received it

    Fuel shortages have also caused some humanitarian organizations to stop or cut back programs.

    By Sara Jerving // 22 October 2021
    People wait to receive food at a temporary shelter for those displaced by conflict in Tigray, Ethiopia. Photo by: Baz Ratner / Reuters

    Between Oct. 7 and 13, only 1% of the 5.2 million people in need of food aid in Ethiopia’s war-battered Tigray region received it, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Over 400,000 people are experiencing famine-like conditions there.

    Of the 52,000 who received food aid, half received only one or two items, the U.N. agency said in a report Thursday.

    The portion of children under 5 years old experiencing severe acute malnutrition is at an “alarming” 2.5%.

    Humanitarian access: Restrictions prevent humanitarian aid from transiting into Tigray from the Afar region, home to road and rail lines connecting to national capital Addis Ababa and Djibouti’s port.

    Fuel is barred through this route, and the report found that shortages forced “several humanitarian partners” to stop or cut back programs, including food aid, water trucking, health services, sanitation activities, and support to survivors of gender-based violence.

    Since mid-July, only 15% of the needed humanitarian trucks have entered the region.

    New restrictions imposed by the Ethiopian government that require additional documentation for flying to Tigray have resulted in 10 to 15 international humanitarian workers on average being denied boarding per U.N. Humanitarian Air Service flight from Addis Ababa to regional capital Mekele. The government has also restricted how much cash organizations can carry into Tigray.

    Escalating violence: The Ethiopian military launched new airstrikes in and around Mekele this week, the first ones since June. Three children were killed, with other people injured. On Friday, the U.N. suspended all flights to Mekele after government airstrikes forced an aid flight to abort a landing and return to Addis Ababa.

    In a news briefing this week, U.S. State Department Spokesperson Ned Price called on the Ethiopian government and Tigray People’s Liberation Front to enter cease-fire negotiations, saying the fighting threatens the "integrity of the Ethiopian state." The U.S. has threatened further sanctions in the absence of a deal. The conflict is set to enter its second year in November.

    Update, Oct. 23, 2021: This article has been updated to include the United Nations’ suspension of flights to Mekele.

    More reading:

    ► Amnesty finds mass sexual violence in Ethiopia's Tigray conflict

    ► Ethiopia suspends MSF and NRC over ‘dangerous’ accusations

    • Humanitarian Aid
    • OCHA
    • Tigray, Ethiopia
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    About the author

    • Sara Jerving

      Sara Jervingsarajerving

      Sara Jerving is a Senior Reporter at Devex, where she covers global health. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, The Wall Street Journal, VICE News, and Bloomberg News among others. Sara holds a master's degree from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism where she was a Lorana Sullivan fellow. She was a finalist for One World Media's Digital Media Award in 2021; a finalist for the Livingston Award for Young Journalists in 2018; and she was part of a VICE News Tonight on HBO team that received an Emmy nomination in 2018. She received the Philip Greer Memorial Award from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 2014.

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