Rebellious Tigrayan forces are completely withdrawing from the neighboring region of Afar in Ethiopia, a spokesman said on Monday, saying he hoped it meant that desperately needed food aid could finally pour into famine-hit Tigray.
“Our forces have left all of Afar,” Getachew Reda, a spokesman for the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, told Reuters on Monday.
Afar regional spokesman Ahmed Koloyta, the regional police commissioner Ahmed Harif and government spokesman Legesse Tulu could not be reached for comment.
Only a trickle of aid has made it into Tigray, where more than 90% of the population needs food aid since the Ethiopian military pulled out at the end of June after months of bloody clashes.
The United Nations has blamed bureaucracy and insecurity for blocking convoys and said at least 100 trucks of aid are needed to enter Tigray every day.
It was unclear if the pull-out was negotiated with the Ethiopian government, which declared a unilateral truce a month ago, saying it wanted to allow humanitarian aid to enter.