Tigray conflict ‘tickles’ land dispute

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Yet any attempt by Mulu to exert authority over Alamata is unlikely to go over well.

As rifle-toting militiamen fired celebratory rounds into the air, young men marched through the streets denouncing the former ruling party of Ethiopiaโ€™s Tigray region as โ€œthieves.โ€

The party, the Tigray Peopleโ€™s Liberation Front (TPLF), is the target of military operations ordered by Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, last yearโ€™s Nobel Peace laureate, that have reportedly left thousands dead since early November.

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But the impromptu parade this month in Alamata, a farming town in southern Tigray flanked by low, rolling mountains, was unrelated to any kind of battlefield victory.

Rather it was to hail the release of Berhanu Belay Teferra, a self-described political prisoner under the TPLF whose pet issue, analysts warn, risks becoming Ethiopiaโ€™s next flashpoint.

In 2018, Berhanu, 48, was detained by the TPLF for advocating that his homeland โ€” located in an area known as Raya, of which Alamata is the biggest city โ€” had no business falling under Tigrayan control.

Berhanu argued that the TPLF had illegally incorporated the famously fertile land into Tigray after it came to power in the early 1990s.

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He was detained for more than two years โ€” enduring beatings and long stretches of solitary confinement in a cave โ€” before pro-TPLF forces, fleeing the governmentโ€™s assault in November, let him go, setting the stage for his triumphant homecoming.

Now reunited with his wife and four children, Berhanu is back to agitating for the transfer of Alamata and its surroundings to Ethiopiaโ€™s Amhara region, which borders Tigray to the south.

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โ€œWe donโ€™t want to live with Tigray people, who donโ€™t know our culture and traditions,โ€ Berhanu told AFP a few days after the parade marking his return โ€” a moment of joy he said was unrivalled by every other event in his life besides his wedding.

Risking โ€˜bloodshedโ€™
Raya is not the only place in Tigray where, since the onset of fighting on November 4, some residents have been clamouring for change.

A similar dynamic is playing out in western Tigray, where activists and politicians also accuse the TPLF of annexing land historically administered by ethnic Amharas.

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In both areas, Abiy is, at least for the time being, relying on Amhara special forces to provide security now that the TPLF has been kicked out.

Amhara officials are leading transitional administrations in multiple towns and cities.

And the word โ€œAmharaโ€ has been scrawled on countless abandoned homes and shuttered storefronts like a hastily graffitied claim of ownership.

William Davison, Ethiopia analyst for the International Crisis Group (ICG), described whatโ€™s happening in western and southern Tigray as โ€œunconstitutional de facto annexationsโ€ that โ€œset a destabilising precedent for the federationโ€.

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Some newly-installed officials make clear they want nothing to do with Tigray, raising the possibility of future conflict over the land.

โ€œFirst we were forced to become part of [Tigray]. Now by force this area is liberated,โ€ said Alamataโ€™s new mayor, Kassa Reda Belay, adding he hoped Abiy would โ€œanswer the question of the peopleโ€ โ€” meaning place the area under Amhara authority.

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โ€œIf not, there will be a lot of bloodshed, and there will be a civil war,โ€ Kassa said.

Path ahead uncertain
It is not clear what the federal governmentโ€™s long-term plans are for the contested territory.

The Amhara regionโ€™s president, Agegnehu Teshager, has said Amhara security forces did not get involved in the conflict to reclaim land.

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But Zadig Abraha, Ethiopiaโ€™s democratisation minister and an Alamata native, told AFP that the city could one day fall under Amhara control.

โ€œThe people have asked loud and clear to be part of it. There is a possibility for that to happen and we will have to wait for some time,โ€ Zadig said.

In the meantime, Abiyโ€™s government is working to prop up a caretaker administration in Tigray led by Mulu Nega, a Tigrayan former higher education official.

โ€œIf Dr Mulu Nega comes here, there will be two or more demonstrations against it. We donโ€™t want him to come. From now onโ€ฆ we want to live with Amhara people,โ€ said Kassa, the Alamata mayor.

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โ€˜I donโ€™t feel safeโ€™
That kind of language strikes fear into the hearts of men like Hailay Gebremedhin, a Tigrayan who has owned a clothing shop on Alamataโ€™s main street for six years.

In November, when fighting broke out in the mountains around Alamata, he stuffed his sneakers and other merchandise into burlap sacks and ran home, where he huddled for weeks.

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Hailay reopened his shop earlier this month because heโ€™d run out of money and food, but heโ€™s not sure what kind of life he and his fellow Tigrayans can have in the city.

โ€œI donโ€™t feel safe here because there are people going around saying, โ€˜Oh, weโ€™ve defeated them, weโ€™ve broken them, now they will leave,’โ€ he said.

The ICGโ€™s Davison said โ€œthere is likely to be sustained Tigrayan resistance if territories are taken out of Tigray, in the same way that Amhara activists have long agitated for the โ€˜returnโ€™ of them.โ€

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There are also some activists who believe Raya should become its own region, belonging to neither Tigray nor Amhara.

For now, though, such voices are quiet in Alamata.

Hailay told AFP heโ€™s afraid even to speak in Tigrinya, the Tigrayan language, for fear of reprisals from Amhara officials and security forces.

As he spoke, he looked out towards the roundabout where large crowds gathered during the parade welcoming the return of Berhanu, the self-described political prisoner.

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Planted in the grass was a picket sign that, to Hailayโ€™s mind, read like a threat.

โ€œThe Amharas wait patiently,โ€ it said, โ€œbut they cannot be broken.โ€

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