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Ethiopian Airlines denies involvement in Tigray war

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Africa’s biggest carrier shrugged off claims that it transported weapons and troops in the Tigray region on Sunday.

Allegations that the airline was supporting the Ethiopian government’s war effort, by transporting military personnel and weaponry to the restive region, surfaced on Twitter over the weekend with the hashtag #BoycottEthiopianAirlines.

Ethiopian Airlines dismissed the claims as “baseless and unfounded,” accusing Twitter users of using doctored and out-of-date images to ‘defame and tarnish their brand’.

The airline suspended flights to and from the Tigray region in November 2020, but reopened airspace temporarily to provide civilian commercial flights in the region, it said in a statement posted on Twitter.

The airspace has since closed, with no flights operating in the region over the past month, it said.

Attempts to sully the airlines hard won reputation were futile, said Zemedeneh Negatu, the chairman of the Fairfax Africa Fund.

“Ethiopian Airlines is one of the largest airlines in the world. It complies with all [International Air Transport Association] IATA and U.S. FAA/DOT regulations. That’s why it flies to four U.S. cities and 135 others worldwide,” he said.

Rebels seize Tigray capital

Tigrayan forces announced they had seized full control of the regional capital Mekelle on June 28, as government forces retreated from the city and declared a unilateral ceasefire.

The Ethiopian government ousted the northern region’s ruling party, the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) in November, triggering a devastating civil war that has raged for nine months.

The TPLF dismissed a government ceasefire offer in early July as a “sick joke” and laid out seven demands for accepting an end to the hostilities.

Source

Ethiopia: COVID-19 Reported Cases in Ethiopia (30 July 2021)

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