#Ethiopia’s blame game after videos reveal starving displaced people in #Tigray: “We are dying daily and burying almost every day.” Long before the videos from Hitsats emerged, it was clear to anyone who cared to look that the IDPs in Tigray were in desperate need. The #TPLF knew it. The Ethiopian government knew it. The #UN and other humanitarian agencies did so as well. But all of these powerful people and institutions, like Haile Selassie half a century ago, were in denial. https://t.co/JE9YDl9jWV
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/
Commander of IRGC Navy:
The US falsely claimed to have destroyed Iran's navy. Then they falsely claimed to be escorting oil tankers. Now they are asking others for reinforcements. We remind that Strait of Hormuz has not yet been militarily closed;it is merely being controlled.
PRESS STATEMENT: STOP THE WAR DRUMS.
Troops are encircling #Tigray. Drone strikes have killed civilians. The people who survived genocide are being pushed by #Ethiopia and #Eritrea, once allies now adversaries, to the brink of another war.
600,000–800,000 killed. Zero accountability. A peace agreement never implemented.
We demand peace. We demand dialogue. We will not be silent.
Read our full statement:
https://t.co/osq5H2Xqng
This is a timely and wise collective move from political parties in #Tigray.
Stop war! Hold the war monger regime in #Ethiopia accountable!
#TigrayGenocide 👇🏿
Ethiopia: analysts suggest that Amhara and Tigray should resolve contested areas through direct negotiations between them after regime change, prioritizing the interests of both communities rather than allowing Abiy’s regime to use these territories as bargaining cards
ALERT:- below is my message in 2020 a day After the invasion on Tigray begun, now AGAIN, @reda_getachew
Stop #tigray Genocide again, Stop the Tigray Genocide NOW! Far too many rapes, murders and far too many starving!
Now, ENDF troops carrying heavy weapons are advancing in four directions from Wolkite towards the Tigray capital of Mekelle.
Prevention is better than curing.
There is a compelling case for international legal recognition when it comes to Somaliland... here’s why
Somaliland’s long-standing de facto independence
Since declaring independence from Somalia in 1991, Somaliland has maintained peace, stability, and effective governance for over three decades despite lacking widespread diplomatic recognition.
Israel’s formal recognition of Somaliland’s sovereignty in December 2025, along with a successful democratic transition in late 2024, has intensified the argument that Somaliland should be internationally recognised.
Somaliland traces its claim to sovereignty back to its status as the British Somaliland Protectorate, which gained independence in 1960 before voluntarily joining with Italian Somaliland — a union that later collapsed.
Somaliland satisfies the classic international law criteria for statehood (permanent population, defined territory, effective government, and capacity for foreign relations) as set out in the 1933 Montevideo Convention.
The region has held multiple credible multi-party elections, including peaceful presidential transitions, and operates a hybrid political system combining modern democracy with traditional institutions.
International relations and practical ties
Somaliland issues its own passports and currency, maintains representative missions abroad, and has bilateral agreements such as a port access pact with Ethiopia.
International legal principles, including uti possidetis juris, support recognising colonial-era borders — strengthening Somaliland’s claim once a political union dissolved.
Other successful separations (e.g., Singapore–Malaysia, Czechoslovakia) show that peaceful, lawful reassertions of sovereignty can be internationally recognised.
Recognition would facilitate cooperation on security, migration, and economic development and reward Somaliland’s stability in a volatile region.
https://t.co/AbMnoZi5ii