25 Nov 2021

United Nations calls for immediate end to fighting in Ethiopia

3:07 pm on 25 November 2021

United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres who is visiting Colombia's capital Bogota, is calling for an end to fighting in Ethiopia, urging its leaders to follow the Andean country's example of peace.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres talks to the media during a press conference at Nariño presidential palace in Bogota, on November 24, 2021. -

United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres addresses a media briefing in Bogota. Photo: AFP

Guterres, who was visiting Colombia to mark the five-year anniversary of the peace deal between the government and the demobilised leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guerrillas, called for an immediate end to hostilities.

"The peace process in Colombia today inspires me to make an urgent call to the protagonists of the conflict in Ethiopia for an unconditional and immediate ceasefire," Guterres said during a joint address with Colombia's President Ivan Duque.

War in Ethiopia broke out in November 2020 in the country's Tigray region between Ethiopian federal troops and the Tigray People's Liberation Front. In July, the conflict spread into two neighbouring regions in northern Ethiopia.

Read/ listen to The Detail's recent backgrounder on the conflict in Ethiopia

Ending fighting in Ethiopia would allow a dialogue to take place between Ethiopians, Guterres said, permitting the country to once again contribute to the stability of the region.

"I would very much like Colombia to be the example followed by the leaders in Ethiopia," Guterres added.

A girl carries her belongings in a basket as she flees flighting between the Ethiopian National Defence Force and Tigray People's Liberation Front, Zarima, 140km from Gondar, Ethiopia, on 16 September 2021.

A girl is among those feeling the fighting between the Ethiopian National Defence Force and the Tigray People's Liberation Front, Zarima, 140km from Gondar, in Ethiopia in September. Photo: AFP

Guterres also urged Colombian lawmakers to ratify the Escazu Accord, an agreement among Latin American and Caribbean countries that enshrines protections for those working on environmental causes.

According to advocacy group Global Witness, Colombia is the most dangerous country for environmental defenders in the world, with a record 65 killed in 2020.

Colombia's government has blamed crime gangs and leftist rebels involved in drug trafficking for the rise in activist killings.

- Reuters

Get the RNZ app

for ad-free news and current affairs