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Asharq Al-Awsat
Asharq Al-Awsat
World
Asharq Al-Awsat

Impatience Rises as Aid Still Blocked to Ethiopia's Tigray

A Tigray woman who fled the conflict in Ethiopia's Tigray region holds her child inside of her temporary shelter at Umm Rakouba refugee camp in Qadarif, eastern Sudan, Monday, Dec. 7, 2020. (AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)

Impatience is rising as humanitarian officials say they still don´t have access to Ethiopia´s embattled Tigray region more than a week after Ethiopia´s government and the United Nations signed a deal to allow in desperately needed food and other aid.

"Regaining access to refugees and others in need is urgent and critical for UNHCR and humanitarian organizations," the head of the UN refugee agency, Filippo Grandi, tweeted Tuesday.

In a separate statement, the head of the Norwegian Refugee Council, Jan Egeland, said his organization is "deeply concerned to find that humanitarian access to the region is still significantly constrained. ... These people can no longer be made to wait. Aid must not be left at a standstill. We have been standing ready to deliver food, emergency shelter, and other essential materials for weeks, and we expected this deal to clear the way."

The UN announced the deal with Ethiopia´s government last Wednesday, saying it was signed a few days earlier on Nov. 29. The agreement, crucially, allows access only to areas under Ethiopian government control. But even those areas are apparently not yet open.

For more than a month, since the fighting erupted Nov. 4 between Ethiopia´s government and the government of the Tigray region following months of rising tensions, aid-laden trucks have waited at the borders of Tigray, a region of some 6 million people.

Warnings have become increasingly dire about food, fuel, clean water, cash, and other necessities running out.

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