The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said on Sunday that hospitals in Mekelle, capital of the Ethiopian region of Tigray, are running low on supplies to care for the wounded, a day after the government announced military operations were complete in the region.
A referral hospital in the city is lacking body bags for the dead and is running low on basic supplies such as gloves, the ICRC said in a statement. The situation in the city of 500,000 people was “quiet” on Sunday, it said.
The government has not said if there were casualties in its offensive to take the city and Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said fighting was over.
Mr Abiy, last year's Nobel Peace Prize winner, declared victory on Saturday evening in a three-week military confrontation with leaders of Tigray's ruling party, the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF).But a communications blackout in Tigray has made it impossible to independently verify whether the regional capital Mekelle is completely under federal government control.
Tigray refugees who fled the conflict in the Ethiopia's Tigray ride a boat on the banks of the Tekeze River on the Sudan-Ethiopia border. Source: AP
It has also frustrated efforts to obtain a full picture of fierce fighting in Tigray that has left thousands dead and sent tens of thousands of refugees streaming across the border into Sudan.
At Ayder Referral Hospital, one of the city's biggest, the ICRC said it "found approximately 80 per cent of patients to be suffering from trauma injuries", without specifying how the injuries were sustained.
"The influx of wounded forced the hospital to suspend many other medical services so that limited staff and resources could be devoted to emergency medical care," the ICRC said in a statement.
It also noted that Mekelle was "quiet" on Sunday, the latest indication the TPLF opted to retreat rather than face government troops in a city that, before the conflict, had a population of half a million.
Mr Abiy announced on 4 November he was sending federal troops into Tigray in response to attacks by pro-TPLF forces on federal army camps.
The move marked a dramatic escalation of tensions between Mr Abiy and the TPLF, which dominated Ethiopian politics for nearly three decades before anti-government protests swept Mr Abiy to office in 2018.
After securing control of western Tigray and giving TPLF leaders a 72-hour ultimatum to surrender, Mr Abiy announced on Thursday he had ordered a "final offensive" against pro-TPLF forces in Mekele.
Fears of insurgency tactics
Global concern had mounted over a possible bloodbath, and heavy shelling was reported in Mekelle earlier Saturday.
But in the government's telling, little fighting actually occurred.
Scant news filtered out of Mekelle on Sunday even through official channels.
A military spokesman, General Mohamed Tessema, told AFP that operations were proceeding "very well" and that soldiers were "doing their work peacefully", but said he could offer no details.
State television stuck to its usual Sunday programming of talk and music shows, while Tigray regional television did not appear to be broadcasting at all for most of the day.
The TPLF has vowed to fight on as long as pro-Abiy forces have any kind of presence in Tigray, and analysts have warned it could shift gears to adopt insurgency-style tactics.
A top commander in the Tigray operations, Lieutenant General Bacha Debele, said the military was "ready to prevent any possible suicide attacks by the TPLF junta in the future," according to a report by state-affiliated Fana Broadcasting Corporate.
Mr Abiy had said police were working to apprehend the party leadership, who were not reachable Sunday, their whereabouts unknown.
Ever since Mr Abiy took office, TPLF leaders have complained of being sidelined from top positions, targeted in corruption prosecutions and broadly scapegoated for the country's woes.
Rockets strike Eritrea
Hours after Mr Abiy announced Mekelle had fallen to federal forces, rockets launched from Tigray targeting Asmara, the capital of neighbouring Eritrea, two diplomats told AFP.
The rockets appeared to be aimed at Asmara's airport and military installations, though it was unclear where they landed and what damage they might have caused.
The US embassy in Asmara reported that "six explosions" had occurred in the city "at about 10:13 pm" Saturday.
It marked the third time Asmara has come under fire from Tigray during the conflict.
The TPLF has claimed responsibility only for the first attack two weeks ago.
It said Asmara was a legitimate target because Ethiopia was enlisting Eritrean military support for its campaign in Tigray, which Ethiopia denies.
Mr Abiy says his government is now focused on rebuilding Tigray and providing humanitarian assistance to the population of six million.
Displacement is believed to be widespread within the region, which has suffered multiple rounds of airstrikes and at least one massacre that killed hundreds of civilians.
The United Nations has spent weeks lobbying - so far unsuccessfully - for full access.
Laetitia Bader, Horn of Africa director for Human Rights Watch, said it was clear the conflict had taken a "heavy toll".
"The UN should be conducting an independent international investigation into abuses committed by all sides since the beginning of the conflict, with the mind to pushing for accountability."