Eritrean soldiers killed more than 100 civilians in the city of Aksum in Tigray in November last year, the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission (EHRC) said in a report published on Wednesday.
The independent rights group made a separate investigation following reports made by Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International into killings in the city, which is a UNESCO World Heritage site.
“Information collected during this preliminary investigation confirms that during the two days of November 28 and November 29, grave violations of human rights were committed and that in Axum, over one hundred residents… were killed by Eritrean soldiers,” the commission said.
#Ethiopia: @EthioHRC spoke to survivors, witnesses during its probe into H/R abuses in #Tigray.
— Ethiopian Human Rights Commission (@EthioHRC) March 24, 2021
They recounted killings of victims in the presence of their families - part of widespread abuses that may amount to war crimes & crimes against humanity. https://t.co/USwBvbHNmC
The new report comes a day after Ethiopia's Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed admitted for the first time that neighbouring Eritrean troops had gone into Tigray and indicated that they may have been involved in abuses against civilians.
#Ethiopia's Prime Minister @AbiyAhmedAli has for the first time admitted that atrocities were committed during the #Tigray conflict and #Eritrean troops entered the region. https://t.co/T0FMI4pGRH
— africanews ???? (@africanews) March 23, 2021
Many others had been injured by the soldiers, the report said and were taken to hospital. But inadequate treatment resulted in their deaths. The report said hospitals were not prepared due to the looting of drugs and medications by Eritrean and Ethiopian soldiers.
The report stated one pregnant woman in labour had lost a lot of blood and died because "there were not enough medical professionals and she could not get the treatment she needed". Another two women who were brought to a nearby town for hospital treatment for injuries from heavy artillery died for similar reasons.
Ethiopia's leader began a military offensive in Tigray on November 4 after he accused the northern region's ruling party, the TPLF, of attacks on its army camps.
He said a month later the fighting was over but the reports of murder, looting and rape by Ethiopian and Eritrean forces have prompted calls for investigations.