Three months after suspending aid to Ethiopia’s Tigray region, the United Nations’ World Food Programme (WFP) says it has resumed food distribution in the troubled area.
“The test distributions are being rolled out at seven food distribution points where WFP and partners have completed the targeting of beneficiaries and digitally registered them,” the agency said in a statement.
The Tigray Region is the northernmost regional state of Ethiopia. The region is the homeland of the Tigrayan, Irob, and Kunama peoples.
After complaints of widespread donations theft, the WFP temporarily stopped providing food aid to the northern region in May. It subsequently cut off all aid to Ethiopia in June. The United States adopted that same move in June.
Before making any more deliveries of aid, especially to residents of the Amhara, Afar, and Somali regions, the WFP stated that it would continue to collaborate with its partners in testing the most recent measures.
In Ethiopia, more than 20 million people—that is, about 16% of the 120 million people rely on food aid as a result of regional wars or recurrent droughts that have also caused 4.6 million people to flee their homes.
The Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) led the northern region into war with the federal government in late 2020. The conflict, which lasted until November 2022 when the African Union and notable voices on the continent brokered a truce, rendered many displaced amid allegations of rights abuses by the Ethiopian government.
Ethiopia’s northern region entered a conflict with the central government in late 2020 under the direction of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). The battle continued until November 2022 when the African Union and prominent figures on the continent arranged a cease-fire.