US: Aid Pause to Ethiopia No Longer Linked to Dam Dispute New

The United States said it has decided to “de-link” its suspension of
millions of dollars of aid to Ethiopia from that country’s dispute with Egypt
over a massive hydroelectric dam project.
But the State Department early Friday said that does not mean all the
roughly $272 million in security and development assistance will immediately
start to flow, and it depends on more recent “developments” — an apparent
reference to the deadly conflict in Ethiopia’s Tigray region.
The State Department said humanitarian assistance remains exempt from
the aid suspension. It said it has informed Ethiopia’s government, The
Associated Press reported.
Ethiopians were furious after former US President Donald Trump last year
directed the suspension of aid to their country in a rare example of his direct
involvement in an African issue.
Ethiopia asserts that the $4.6 billion Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam
that it has nearly completed on the Blue Nile River is essential for
development and the pulling of millions of people out of poverty. Egypt says it
threatens its water supply.
Ethiopia is now under pressure from the US and others including the
European Union and United Nations over the deadly fighting in its northern
Tigray region, where some 6 million people have been largely cut off from the
world since fighting began in November between Ethiopian and allied forces and
Tigray ones.
Witness accounts have emerged of massacres, people beginning to starve
to death and the presence of thousands of soldiers from neighboring Eritrea,
which Ethiopia’s government has denied.
The US has said Eritrean soldiers should “immediately” leave Ethiopia.
And earlier this week, a State Department spokesperson said “we remain gravely
concerned by the widespread humanitarian suffering and reported human rights
abuses in the Tigray region.”
The spokesperson urged “an immediate end to the fighting in Tigray, full and unhindered humanitarian access, an independent investigation into the human rights violations and abuses and for those responsible to be held accountable.”