
Four media workers in Ethiopia’s conflict-wracked Tigray region have been arrested and detained, their families and employers said.
Tigray has been at the centre of fighting since November last year when Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed announced military operations against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), accusing them of attacking federal army camps.
The northern region was an information black hole for much of that time, with reporting heavily restricted and the internet cut off.
Abiy’s government declared victory over the TPLF after its forces withdrew from principal cities and towns at the end of November. However, low-level fighting has continued in some parts of Tigray, home to more than five million people. Thousands of people are believed to have died and hundreds of thousands have fled their homes since fighting began.
Seven international media organisations, including Al Jazeera, have now been granted accreditation to report from Tigray, but journalists were warned by officials they might face unspecified “corrective measures” if they did not meet local standards.
Fitsum Berhane and Alula Akalu, who were working as translators for journalists from AFP news agency and the Financial Times, were detained on Saturday, their families said.
A third journalist, Temrat Yemane, was also arrested in Mekelle, the Tigrayan capital.
On Monday, the BBC said one of its journalists, Girmay Gebru, had been detained by the military in Mekelle.
Fitsum and Alula are being held at a military college near Mekelle University, their families told AFP. Relatives have not been able to see them and no explanation has been given for the arrests.
“They are under investigation. The information we have is that there is already some evidence,” said Mulu Nega, leader of the interim administration in Tigray appointed by Addis Ababa. “There is no detailed information.”.