Goda Massacre
Massacre
The Eritrean Defence Forces (EDF) killed 19 youngsters and an old man at the Goda Bottle and Glass Share Company (Eastern Tigray) on 2 December 2020. Soon after occupying Idaga Hamus, the Eritrean army started looting the glass factory. On 2 December, 17 teenagers and young men, mostly relatives, were taken from Sasun Betehawariyat, near Idaga Hamus, by EDF soldiers to help to loot the Goda Bottle factory, further up along the road in Gu'iguna. Teame Hagos and Negasi Berihu tried to escape and were immediately shot dead. The other 15 were executed in the evening of 2 December. After transporting the heavy machinery out of the factory, the EDF withdrew on 31 December and the families of the victims could recover the bodies (the 17 youngsters and additional three bodies) and hold a formal gathering for mourning.
Typical massacres committed by Ethiopian and Eritrean soldiers in the Tigray war are (1) revenge when they lose a battle; (2) to terrorise and extract information about whereabouts of TPLF leaders; (3) murder of suspected family members of TDF fighters; and (4) terrorising the Tigray society as a whole such as in case of mass killings in churches. The Goda massacre is part of the fourth category.
Perpetrators
Relatives and other villagers interpreted the identity of the perpetrators as Eritrean soldiers – the village elders met the Eritrean commander to negotiate the recovery of the corpses of the victims.
Victims
The “Tigray: Atlas of the humanitarian situation” mentions 20 victims, 19 of which have been identified.
Early January 2021, based on travellers' accounts, Jan Nyssen mentioned that around 1–14 December, 13 boys from Tokot village near Idaga Hamus, aged 12–15, were forced to help EDF soldiers in loading a truck and were then executed. The conditions are very similar with those of the Goda massacre, and it seems to be one event.
Reactions
The looting of the Goda factory is mentioned in several media articles. Goda was also visited by NPR journalist Eyder Peralty, as well as Tigrai TV, who interviewed relatives and saw the mass graves of the victims.
After months of denial by the Ethiopian authorities that massacres occurred during the Tigray War, a joint investigation by OHCHR and the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission was announced in March 2021.
While the Ethiopian government promised that Eritrean troops will be pulled out from Tigray, the Eritrean government denies any participation in warfare in Tigray, let alone in massacres.
References
- ^ Annys, S., Vanden Bempt, T., Negash, E., De Sloover, L., Ghekiere, R., Haegeman, K., Temmerman, D., Nyssen, J., 2021. Tigray: Atlas of the humanitarian situation, version 2.1. Ghent (Belgium): Ghent University, Department of Geography Archived 2021-10-13 at archive.today
- ^ Associated Press, 15 November 2021: 'You can't even cry loudly': Counting Ethiopia's war dead
- ^ K. Tesfay, Mehari (2021-02-10). "The Goda massacre: The story of three brothers". Tghat. Archived from the original on 2021-02-13. Retrieved 2021-04-13.
- ^ Daily Nation, 26 February 2021: Tigray War: A tale of genocide, rape and starvation
- ^ Tigray Defence Forces, a military structure that came into existence during the Tigray War, consisting of a merger of Special Forces of the Tigray Regional Government, defected soldiers of the Ethiopian National Defense Force, local militia, members of Tigrayan political parties (TPLF, National Congress of Great Tigray, Salsay Weyane Tigray, Tigray Independence Party, ...) and numerous youth who fled to the mountains.
- ^ The World radio (2 April 2021): Counting the victims in Tigray
- ^ TGHAT, A compilation of the verified list of civilian victims from different sources
- ^ Nyssen, Jan (2021). "The situation in Tigray at the beginning of 2021". ResearchGate. Archived from the original on 2021-01-14. Retrieved 2021-04-26.
- ^ NPR Radio, 20 April. Updates On The Conflict In Ethiopia's Tigray Region
- ^ Tigrai TV, 11 October 2021: English News - Sewha massacre
- ^ France24, 18 March 2021: UN rights chief agrees to joint Tigray probe Archived 2021-04-22 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ DW, 19 March 2021: Fact check: Are other nations involved in the war in Tigray?