EPO Weekly Update (28 May 2024)
Summary of Ethiopian conflict events including clashes and attacks in various regions and impact on tourism sector.
Also available in Amharic
Situation Summary
A humanitarian worker and a refugee were killed as clashes escalated in Amhara region, while a rare incident in South Ethiopia region resulted in the death of a foreign national. Meanwhile, cross-border attacks were reported along the Tigray-Afar border.
Clashes intensify again in Amhara region
In Amhara region, fighting between the Ethiopian National Defense Force and Fano militias intensified during the last week, with clashes reported in West Gojam, Awi, North and South Wello, North Shewa, and South, Central, and West Gondar zones. Clashes in Amhara region doubled during the week in comparison to the rest of the month of May. In addition to increased reported fighting, a humanitarian worker was shot and killed on 24 May, and several others injured after his convoy was attacked by unidentified gunmen between Gondar and Metema.1 A Fano representative in the Gondar area blamed the attack on government forces, saying they control the area that the convoy was passing through.2
Despite increased recorded clashes, Amhara’s regional president announced on 25 May that the government had resumed services in all but eight of the 266 woredas in the region.3 Notably, clashes returned to Lalibela, an important tourist and cultural town in North Wello zone. In early November 2023, the town was briefly controlled by Fano militias, prompting fighting that saw heavy weapons fired near historical churches. The Tigray People’s Liberation Front controlled Lalibela in August 2021 during the northern conflict, which led to damage to hotels and the airport during the war.
Meanwhile, also in Amhara region, issues concerning refugees continued. On 18 May, unidentified armed men shot and killed an Eritrean refugee at Chila in Dabat Woreda (North Gonder zone) after abducting him from the Alemwach refugee camp a day before. Insecurity in Amhara region, partially tied to the Fano insurgency, has worsened over the past few months and led to numerous incidents of kidnapping. On 1 May, thousands of Sudanese refugees protested and left camps in West Gondar zone, citing an unbearable level of insecurity.
Spanish tourist among those killed in South Ethiopia region security incident
On 20 May, suspected Mursi ethnic militiamen clashed with ethnic Ari militiamen in the Mago National Park. Three Ethiopian citizens and one Spanish citizen, a photographer,4 were killed in the exchange of fire. ENDF forces intervened and arrested several people involved in the incident.
Security incidents involving tourists are very rare in Ethiopia. However, during the Northern Conflict tourist visits to the country dropped significantly and have yet to fully recover. Some key tourist locations in Tigray region that were closed throughout the Northern Conflict were reopened following a government initiative in December 2023.5 The government’s Ethiopian Investment Commission recently identified tourism as a key opportunity for foreign investment,6 but the sector’s growth has been hindered by ongoing insecurity in areas of Amhara and Oromia and parts of the country’s south.
Pastoralist attacks in Tigray region
In Tigray region, on 21 May at least seven people were reportedly killed after an unidentified armed group from Afar region crossed the border into Raya Azebo Woreda and attacked a group of cattle herders guarding livestock. The Tigray Interim Regional Administration called upon the Afar regional government and federal police to investigate the matter and pursue the attackers.7
Raya Azebo woreda is located northeast of Raya Alamata woreda, which saw heavy fighting in February between Amhara and Tigray militias. Boundary-related clashes involving pastoralists are common in Ethiopia, but they are often exacerbated by broader political tensions. ACLED records 16 incidents involving pastoralist actors since 24 May 2023.

Ethiopia at a Glance
18 May – 24 May 2024
The data cover the period from 18 May to 24 May 2024. For more information about how ACLED collects data and categorizes events, see the ACLED Codebook. Some events from this coverage period might be included in the data in subsequent weeks due to reporting delays.
- Battles: 43 Events
- Explosions/Remote Violence: 1 Event
- Violence Against Civilians: 8 Events
- Mob Violence: 0 Event
- Protests: 1 Event
- Violent Demonstrations: 1 Event
Footnotes
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
Abdoulie Sey, ‘Four including Spanish tourist killed in Ethiopian skirmish,’ APA, 22 May 2024
- 5
- 6
- 7
Tigray Communication Affairs Bureau, ‘A statement from the Tigray Interim Government,’ 21 May 2024
- 8
This includes the Battles, Explosions/Remote violence and Violence against civilians event types, as well as the Mob violence sub-event type of the Riots event type.
- 9
This includes the Protests event type as well as the Violent demonstrations sub-event type of the Riots event type.