logo
Three Aid Workers Were ‘Intentionally Killed' in Ethiopia, M.S.F. Says

Three Aid Workers Were ‘Intentionally Killed' in Ethiopia, M.S.F. Says

New York Times21 hours ago
Doctors Without Borders has accused Ethiopia's government of failing to properly investigate the slayings of three of the group's aid workers, releasing a new report on Tuesday that implicates Ethiopian soldiers and demands that the country's government bring the perpetrators to justice.
The report was the latest turn in a four-year effort to seek accountability for a notorious episode of violence against international humanitarian workers. The aid workers' bullet-riddled bodies were found on a remote roadside in the northern Tigray region of Ethiopia in June 2021, at the height of a brutal civil war.
'Our team was executed,' Raquel Ayora, a senior official with Doctors Without Borders, told reporters in Nairobi on Tuesday. 'There is no way the perpetrators could not know that they were killing civilians.'
Although the report by Doctors Without Borders stopped short of explicitly naming perpetrators, it appeared to suggest that Ethiopian soldiers were responsible. That finding was broadly similar to a 2022 investigation by The New York Times that identified an Ethiopian military officer who gave orders to 'finish off' the aid workers shortly before they were killed.
Doctors Without Borders, which is widely known by its French name, Médecins Sans Frontières, noted that the Ethiopian government and its forces had shown increased hostility toward international aid groups in the weeks leading up to the shootings. It also said that retreating Ethiopian troops were present on the road where the team was killed.
But the group said that despite repeated assurances from the Ethiopian government that an investigation was underway, the victims' families still have not received 'credible answers' about what happened.
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

South Africa Envoy Sidelined in Talks to Reset Relations With US
South Africa Envoy Sidelined in Talks to Reset Relations With US

Bloomberg

time2 hours ago

  • Bloomberg

South Africa Envoy Sidelined in Talks to Reset Relations With US

Three months after South Africa appointed Mcebisi Jonas as a special envoy to the US and tasked him with helping reset bilateral relations with President Donald Trump's administration, he has yet to visit the nation or meet with any high-level officials. Relations between Pretoria and Washington have been fraught since Trump's return to the White House in January. The American president has made the unfounded claim that South Africa is subjecting White farmers to genocide and confiscating their land, expelled its ambassador, halted most aid and threatened to slap a 30% reciprocal tariff on its exports to the US by Aug. 1 if a favorable trade deal isn't struck. There have been no official land seizures in South Africa since apartheid ended in 1994.

Ramaphosa appoints Gwede Mantashe as acting police minister
Ramaphosa appoints Gwede Mantashe as acting police minister

News24

time2 hours ago

  • News24

Ramaphosa appoints Gwede Mantashe as acting police minister

President Cyril Ramaphosa has appointed Gwede Mantashe as acting Minister of Police on Tuesday evening, July 15, 2025. Mantashe, who currently serves as Minister of Mineral and Petroleum Resources, will take on the role immediately to address growing concerns within South Africa's police ministry. Mantashe will hold the position until Professor Firoz Cachalia assumes the role of Minister of Police at the beginning of August, following his retirement from the University of Witwatersrand. This decision and appointment come amid allegations of corruption and criminal infiltration within South Africa's law enforcement and intelligence agencies, particularly against former Police Minister Senzo Mchunu, who was placed on special leave pending a judicial inquiry into claims of interference in investigations and colluding with a murder-accused businessman to disband a task team probing political killings in KZN. President @CyrilRamaphosa has appointed Minister of Mineral and Petroleum Resources Gwede Mantashe as Acting Minister of Police with immediate effect. — The Presidency 🇿🇦 (@PresidencyZA) July 15, 2025

Healey: Accountability starts now over Afghan data leak and injunction
Healey: Accountability starts now over Afghan data leak and injunction

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Healey: Accountability starts now over Afghan data leak and injunction

Defence Secretary John Healey has said that 'accountability starts now' after an injunction blocking reporting about the leak of data on Afghans who supported British forces was lifted. His Tory predecessor, Sir Ben Wallace, has said he makes 'no apology' for applying for the initial injunction and insisted it was 'not a cover-up'. Thousands of people are being relocated to the UK as part of a secret £850 million scheme set up after the breach. Mr Healey was informed of the breach, which dates back to 2022, while in his shadow role in opposition and earlier this year, he commissioned a review that led to the injunction being lifted. 'Accountability starts now, doesn't it, because it allows the proper scrutiny of what went on, the decisions that Ben Wallace took, the decisions I've taken, and the judgments… and any action or accountability that may be appropriate can follow now,' he told BBC Breakfast. A dataset containing the personal information of nearly 19,000 people who applied for the Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy (Arap) was released 'in error' in February 2022 by a defence official. The Ministry of Defence only became aware of the breach when excerpts from the dataset were posted anonymously on a Facebook group in August 2023, and a super-injunction was granted at the High Court in an attempt to prevent the Taliban from finding out about the leak. Sir Ben said he had applied for a four-month injunction and did not know why it was converted into a super-injunction in September 2023, by which time Grant Shapps had taken over as defence secretary. 'But nevertheless, I think the point here is I took a decision that the most important priority was to protect those people who could have been or were exposed by this data leak in Afghanistan, living amongst the Taliban who had no regard for their safety, or indeed potentially could torture them or murder them,' he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme. He had defended his decision in an article in the Telegraph. 'I make no apology for applying to the court for an injunction at the time. It was not, as some are childishly trying to claim, a cover-up,' he said. The leak led to the creation of a secret Afghan relocation scheme – the Afghanistan Response Route – in April 2024. The scheme is understood to have cost around £400 million so far, with a projected final cost of about £850 million. A total of around 6,900 people are expected to be relocated by the end of the scheme. It is understood that the unnamed official emailed the data outside a secure government system while attempting to verify information, believing the dataset to only have around 150 rows. However, more than 33,000 rows of information were inadvertently sent. Downing Street declined to say on Tuesday whether the official involved had faced disciplinary action or was still employed by the Government. Asked if they had faced any sanctions, Mr Healey said he was not going to 'lead a witch hunt after a defence official'. 'This is much bigger than the mistake of an individual,' he told the BBC. He had confirmed the previous day that they were no longer doing the same job on the Afghan brief. The injunction was in place for almost two years, covering Labour and Conservative governments. Mr Healey said he was 'comfortable' he had not misled people but that parliamentary committees would now have a chance to scrutinise the decision he and other ministers before him had made, in remarks to Times Radio. He had offered a 'sincere apology' on behalf of the Government in the Commons on Tuesday, and said he had been 'deeply uncomfortable' being unable to speak about it in Parliament. Kemi Badenoch has said sorry on behalf of the Conservatives for the leak. 'On behalf of the government and on behalf of the British people, yes, because somebody made a terrible mistake and names were put out there… and we are sorry for that,' she told LBC. Between 80,000 and 100,000 people, including the estimated number of family members of the Arap applicants, were affected by the breach and could be at risk of harassment, torture or death if the Taliban obtained their data, judges said in June 2024. However, an independent review, commissioned by the Government in January 2025, concluded last month that the dataset is 'unlikely to significantly shift Taliban understanding of individuals who may be of interest to them'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store