Tirhas was pregnant, raising three kids, and running a small business in her village when a group of soldiers broke into her home. One by one, they brutally raped her. She lost her unborn baby, her home, her safety – and she’s not the only one.
An estimated 120,000 women and girls in Ethiopia’s Tigray had their bodies turned into a battleground in perhaps the least known but most deadly war of this century.
Yet years onwards, survivors are still waiting for accountability and justice – and they’re asking the world to stand up for them. Let’s come together to shine a global spotlight on this issue. Together, we can demand the UN reopen investigations, the EU and UK sanction the responsible officials, and the African Union does everything it can to fully implement and cement the peace agreement:
An estimated 120,000 women and girls in Ethiopia’s Tigray had their bodies turned into a battleground in perhaps the least known but most deadly war of this century.
Yet years onwards, survivors are still waiting for accountability and justice – and they’re asking the world to stand up for them. Let’s come together to shine a global spotlight on this issue. Together, we can demand the UN reopen investigations, the EU and UK sanction the responsible officials, and the African Union does everything it can to fully implement and cement the peace agreement:
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