Human Rights Watch says many of those facing execution were convicted after proceedings that:
Lacked legal representation
Had no translators
Relied on coerced confessions
@Reuters@BBCWorld@AJEnglish#StopCapitalPunishment
🚨At least 65 Ethiopian migrants are at imminent risk of execution in Saudi Arabia for drug-related offenses,Human Rights Watch said today.Saudi authorities executed 3 others on April 21,2026. https://t.co/ap94LR3f2P…
#HumanRights#Ethiopia#Tigray#MigrantRights#Justice@hrw
#InPicture: Internally displaced people in Shire, Tigray live in harsh conditions inside torn plastic shelters battered by sun, wind and rain.
The makeshift homes offer little protection, reflecting the daily struggle and hardship faced by nearly one millions IDPs across Tigray.
As tensions rise and the risk of renewed war grows, women and girls in #Tigray are on the brink of another crisis.
Join Refugees International, @ECDCUS, @HarambeeOrg, and @giwps for a discussion on the current realities facing displaced women in Tigray.
https://t.co/ZXRYGDxwH9
“The international community underwrote a genocide in order to overturn #Tigray’s democratic will — that’s what happened. We were punished by genocide for voting. So, you would understand if there is a fear of demanding that we get to vote again.”
— Semhal Meles
Dear @UKinEthiopia It sounds like you’re expressing deep frustration about how the Pretoria Agreement has been handled and the role of international actors. That conflict has been devastating, and many people—especially those directly affected—feel that outside institutions haven’t done enough or have responded too slowly.
It’s true that ceasefire or peace agreements often depend heavily on political will from the parties involved, and enforcement mechanisms can be weak. Organizations like the African Union or the United Nations can facilitate agreements and apply pressure, but they don’t always have the power—or unity among member states—to ensure compliance on the ground. That gap between commitments and reality is one of the biggest criticisms of international diplomacy.
At the same time, it’s worth being careful about painting all institutions or leaders as entirely corrupt or indifferent. There are often competing geopolitical interests, limited leverage, and internal divisions that shape how these situations unfold. None of that excuses inaction or suffering, but it helps explain why responses can seem inconsistent or inadequate.
If you want, we can dig into what’s reportedly been happening since the agreement, or how enforcement mechanisms in similar conflicts have worked (or failed) elsewhere.
This is unfair judgement?@BerhanuAsres
#Justice4Tigray
+1,300 IDP in Tigray region have died over the past 3years due to hunger & lack of medical care, a regional official told @AFP.
The deaths highlight the worsening humanitarian conditions facing IDPs living in camps across the region.
#TigrayGenocide#IDPs@WFP@WHO@WFP_UNHAS
+1,300 IDP in Tigray region have died over the past 3years due to hunger & lack of medical care, a regional official told @AFP.
The deaths highlight the worsening humanitarian conditions facing IDPs living in camps across the region.
#TigrayGenocide#IDPs@WFP@WHO@WFP_UNHAS
Tigray Patients Suffer as Ethiopia Reinstates Wartime Siege
As Ethiopia restores its genocidal wartime blockade, #Tigray’s health system faces an imminent operational collapse due to severe fuel shortages, a halt in pharmaceutical supplies and mounting financial restrictions. 1/
Ethiopia: Daniel Kibret, an advisor to PM Abiy Ahmed on social affairs, delivered a hatred speech in public stating that Ethiopian diaspora members who criticize the regime should be denied burial service in Ethiopia after their death
Dear @_AfricanUnion@AJEnglish@StateDept@UN_HRC@WhiteHouse@HouseofCommons@HouseForeign@cnni@BBCWorld The Massacre of Orthodox Christians in Arsi
(OLF-OLA Press Release)
The cardinal principle of Abiy Ahmed’s fragile grip on power is simple: exploit all fault lines, set the country’s peoples and opposition forces against each other, and reign over the ruins. Wrapped in the beguiling languages of love, peace and Medemer, this machinery of division has been running at full tilt over the last eight years.
Just in the past week: Abiy helicoptered into Wollega, masquerading as the defender of Oromia, to announce to Oromos that "northerners are coming with knives to steal Oromo’s opportunity"—very rich coming from a man who just recently bragged of “destroying Wollega even more than Tigray.”
Abiy then yanked electoral districts in Wolkait and Raya back and forth like rope in a tug-of-war, first “gifting” them to Tigray to bait the Amhara, then snatching them away to bait the Tigrayans, then scrambling through the courts to undo his own mischief when it threatened to unite rather than divide.
And in these past days, his mercenaries have been moving through Arsi in Oromia, murdering innocent Orthodox Christians— to fracture any attempt at collective resolve against his rule by igniting inter-religious and inter-ethnic conflict. It is only because tolerance runs deep that the society still holds. Otherwise, the attempt was to pit Amhara against Oromo, Christian against Muslim, neighbour against neighbour.
Whether in uniform or without, whether carrying a gun or a pen, whether they target Oromos or Amharas, anyone who weaponizes innocent civilians for political ends is our enemy. Not a rival. Not an opponent. An enemy. And we will fight them to the end. #Ethiopiacrisis
@BerhanuAsres
OLF-OLA High Command
March 2, 2026
#Oromia #highlightseveryone #everyone