African Union expresses 'deep concern' over crisis in Ethiopia's Tigray
Africa
By
AFP
| Mar 14, 2025
A general view of the logo of the African Union at the AU headquarters in Addis Ababa on February 15, 2024. [AFP]
The African Union said Friday that it was following events in the Ethiopian region of Tigray with "deep concern" as tensions between rival factions threatened a fragile peace agreement.
"The African Union (AU) has been closely monitoring the evolving situation within the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) with deep concern," it said in a statement.
A peace agreement in 2022 ended a brutal two-year war between Tigrayan rebels and the federal government that claimed up to 600,000 lives, according to some estimates.
But a failure to fully implement the terms has fuelled divisions within the Tigrayan political elite and, combined with deteriorating ties between Ethiopia and neighbouring Eritrea has raised fears of a new conflict.
READ MORE
Soaring fuel costs spark claims Ruto is driving the economy to the ground
Beyond Mombasa: Why Kenya must rethink its port strategy
Dock worker Owuor ousts Sang, ends 20-year rule at union
State's affordable housing project: Why Kenyans are sceptical
Government backs TouristTap in drive to formalise revenues
Why Kenya must rethink how food systems are delivered
Regulators tighten grip on predatory lending practices
Nairobi set for new Sh672m urban greening initiative
Mortgages fall short in solving Kenya's housing crisis
State banks on sensitisation forums to unlock Kenya's Pig sector as pork demand rises
"The AU emphasises that adherence to the (2022 peace agreement) is crucial for maintaining the hard-won peace and fostering an environment conducive to sustainable peacebuilding, reconciliation and development," the statement said.