‼️ Interms of #Pretoria agreement was to ensure the withdrawal of
None ENDF forces, However the situation in the war-torn Tigray is getting worse even after the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement please
@StateDept@AFP@UN@hrw@UN_HRC
Take action to
#UpholdPretoriaAgreement
🚨On #WorldRefugeeDay, remember:
A refugee is not just someone who lost a home.
A refugee is a future doctor whose education was interrupted.
A farmer denied access to his land.
An elder denied the dignity of returning home.
#RightToReturn#JusticeForTigray@Refugees@saba_t12
Dear @StateDept@USEmbassyAddis@realDonaldTrump@AUC_PAPS@UN@AfricaUnions@UN_HRC@AsstSecStateAF@SecMarcoRubio@EU_Commission@UKParliament@BettyMcCollum04 Following the U.S. State Department’s one-sided Press Statement announcing targeted visa restrictions against members of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), we have submitted an official letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio urging the immediate reconsideration of this decision.
By imposing asymmetrical measures, the U.S. is punishing the victims of a recognized campaign of ethnic cleansing and genocide while absolving the true architects of continued instability in Ethiopia. Demanding the full implementation of the Pretoria Agreement (CoHA), including the withdrawal of occupying proxy forces and the dignified return of internally displaced persons (IDPs), is a plea for the rule of law and survival, not a “pro-war” stance.
We are also alarmed that the Department’s framing closely mirrors the lobbying of pro-regime networks and state-sponsored media, which routinely weaponize eliminationist rhetoric. Labeling the legitimate Government of Tigray and the TPLF as "hardliners," "the old guard," a "junta," a "terrorist threat," or a "cancer" echoes the dehumanizing biological metaphors that preceded the initial mass atrocities. U.S. foreign policy must not be shaped by networks that openly promote the pathologization, dehumanization, and eradication of the Tigrayan people.
In our letter, we respectfully urge the State Department to reconsider and revoke its decision, to apply accountability equally, and to ensure that U.S. policy is guided by facts on the ground rather than one-sided political narratives or the politicization of the peace process.
📄 Read our full letter below. 👇
U.S. Department of State, U.S. Department of State: Bureau of African Affairs, U.S. Embassy Addis Ababa
European External Action Service - EEAS, European Union in Ethiopia, EU Delegation to the African Union, European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights
African Union @BerhanuAsres
Day 2059 of the #TigrayGenocide:
The suffering endured by countless #Tigrayan families deserves continued attention, compassion, and action. Lives have been disrupted by conflict, displacement, hunger, and loss. Every person deserves peace, dignity, justice.
#Justice4Tigray
🚨Birhan:The moment everything shut down, it felt like the world had disappeared around us. No phone. No internet. No transportation. No banking. No way to know who was alive and who was not.
@SecRubio@AP@UN_HRC#Justice4TigraysWomenAndGirls https://t.co/E5WoQHNv0V…
@saba_t12
🧵 June 19 should challenge the conscience of the world.
On this International Day for the Elimination of Sexual Violence in Conflict, we remember those whose suffering remains unseen.
#CRSV
Pain does not recognize borders.
Suffering does not carry a passport.
@UN_Women@UN
5.
Survivors continue to carry the consequences long after the guns fall silent:
• Physical injuries
• Trauma
• HIV and other diseases
• Social stigma
• Economic hardship
The war may end.
The suffering does not.
#JusticeForTigray#CRSV@UNHumanRights@_AfricanUnion
10/10
Help create the conditions for safe, voluntary, dignified, and sustainable return.
Because a child belongs in school.
A farmer belongs on his land.
An elder belongs in their community.
And every displaced person deserves to go home.
#WorldRefugeeDay#Tigray@Refugees