Latest news with #RaquelAyora


New York Times
7 days ago
- Politics
- New York Times
Three Aid Workers Were ‘Intentionally Killed' in Ethiopia, M.S.F. Says
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.


Saudi Gazette
7 days ago
- Saudi Gazette
Aid workers 'executed' in Ethiopia's Tigray war, charity says
NAIROBI — An investigation by medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) into the "execution" of three of its workers during a humanitarian mission in Ethiopia's war-hit northern Tigray region has found evidence that the country's army was responsible for the killings four years ago. MSF's report includes claims that Ethiopian troops were present at the scene of the killing of the three - a Spanish national and two Ethiopians. "They were executed," MSF Spain's general director Raquel Ayora told the BBC. "They were facing their attackers [and] were shot at very close range... several times." The BBC has asked the Ethiopian government for a response to the allegation. MSF said it was releasing the findings of its report into the incident as the government had failed to provide a "credible account" of the deaths despite 20 face-to-face meetings over the last four years. Thirty-five-year-old Spaniard María Hernández Matas, along with 32-year-old Yohannes Halefom Reda and 31-year-old Tedros Gebremariam, were killed on 24 June 2021 while travelling in central Tigray to assess medical needs. "They were very professional and passionate," Ms Ayora told the BBC. She added that the three were fully identifiable in MSF vests and their vehicle had the charity's flag and logos on either side when they were shot. "So, they knew that they were killing humanitarian aid workers," she said. Ms Matas had been working in Tigray since before the war and "was very much loved" by people in the region, Ms Ayora said. Her death has been particularly devastating for her mother as she was her only child, the MSF official added. Tedros was killed soon after his wife had given birth to a baby girl. His widow named the baby Maria, after her father's killed Spanish colleague, Mr Ayora said. The Tigray conflict broke out in 2020 following a massive fall-out between the regional and federal governments, with neighbouring Eritrea entering the war on the side of the Ethiopian National Defence Force (ENDF). The conflict ended two years later following a peace deal brokered by the African Union (AU). Its envoy, former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, put the number of people who died in the conflict at around 600,000. Researchers said the deaths were caused by fighting, starvation and a lack of health care. MSF said the killing of its staff took place at a time when the conflict was intensifying, and Ethiopian and Eritrean troops were becoming increasingly hostile towards aid workers in the region. The charity's report includes what it says is evidence that a convoy of soldiers from the Ethiopian army, retreating from fighting, was present at the scene of the deaths, which, it adds, is corroborated by satellite imagery. The report says both civilian and military eyewitnesses had come forward to directly implicate Ethiopian army soldiers in the killings, including one who allegedly heard a commander order an attack on the aid workers' vehicle. However the charity says "the level and nature" of the army's involvement in the attack "remains to be clarified". "The review found a large body of corroborating evidence that placed a convoy of retreating ENDF troops on the road where the killings took place on the day of the incident," MSF said. — BBC


BBC News
15-07-2025
- Health
- BBC News
Ethiopian troops 'executed' aid workers in Tigray conflict, MSF official says
Ethiopian government forces "executed" three employees of medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) while they were on a humanitarian mission in Ethiopia's war-hit northern Tigray region four years ago, a senior MSF official has told the BBC. Raquel Ayora's comments came as MSF released its findings on what it called the "intentional and targeted" killing of the three - a Spanish national and two Ethiopians - at the height of the now-ended conflict in Tigray. "They were executed," said Ms Ayora, MSF Spain's general director. "They were facing their attackers [and] were shot at very close range… several times."The BBC has asked the Ethiopian government for a response to the allegation. MSF said it was releasing its findings as the government had failed to provide a "credible account" of the deaths despite 20 face-to-face meetings over the last four years. Thirty-five-year-old Spaniard María Hernández Matas, along with 32-year-old Yohannes Halefom Reda and 31-year-old Tedros Gebremariam, were killed on 24 June 2021 while travelling in central Tigray to assess medical needs. "They were very professional and passionate," Ms Ayora told the BBC. She added that the three were fully identifiable in MSF vests and their vehicle had the charity's flag and logos on either side when they were shot."So, they [Ethiopian troops] knew that they were killing humanitarian aid workers," she said, adding that the team's travel route had also been shared in advance with fighting Tigray conflict broke out in 2020 following a massive fall-out between the regional and federal governments, with neighbouring Eritrea entering the war on the side of the Ethiopian National Defence Force (ENDF).The conflict ended two years later following a peace deal brokered by the African Union (AU). Its envoy, former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, put the number of people who died in the conflict at around 600, said the deaths were caused by fighting, starvation and a lack of health killings took place at a time when the conflict was intensifying, and Ethiopian and Eritrean troops were becoming increasingly hostile towards aid workers in the region, MSF said in its report. Ms Matas had been working in Tigray since before the war and "was very much loved" by people in the region, Ms Ayora death has been particularly devastating for her mother as she was her only child, the MSF official added. Mr Tedros was killed soon after his wife had given birth to a baby girl. His widow named the baby Maria, after her father's killed Spanish colleague, Mr Ayora said. The bodies of Ms Matas and Mr Yohannes were found between 100m (300ft) and 400m from the wreckage of their vehicle. The body of Mr Tedros, the driver, was found by the vehicle."In line with MSF travel policy, the driver stays close to the vehicle", Ms Ayora vehicle was shot at multiple times and burned on the main road from the town of Abi Adi to Yech'illa, Ms Ayora Matas and Mr Yohannes were walking when they were shot, she said, adding: "We don't know if they were called for interrogation or they decided to engage with the soldiers."MSF said it had relied on satellite images, witnesses and publicly available information on the Ethiopian military's movements at the time of the killings to draw its investigation placed Ethiopian troops at the "precise location" where the killings occurred, the charity added. MSF's report quoted witnesses as saying they overhead an officer informing the local commander of an approaching white car and the commander giving an order to shoot. Moments later, the commander was allegedly informed that the soldiers had tried to shoot but that the car had turned towards Abi Adi and stopped, at which point the commander gave the order to "go and catch them" and "remove them", the report Ayora told the BBC that officials from Ethiopia's Ministry of Justice had verbally informed MSF in mid-2022 that their preliminary investigation showed that government troops were not at the scene of the killing. However, the officials refused to give this in writing, and the charity kept engaging with the government in order to end "impunity" at a time when an increasing number of aid workers were being killed in conflicts around the world, Ms Ayora said. More BBC stories on Tigray conflict: 'I lost my leg on the way home from school'How a massacre in the sacred city of Aksum unfoldedThe war is over but the rapes continue Go to for more news from the African us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica