FILE PHOTO: Ethiopia's Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed attends a signing ceremony with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia December 7, 2019

© REUTERS / TIKSA NEGERI

15:48 GMT 25.11.2020

An armed conflict between Ethiopia’s government and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) started earlier in November after the government accused Tigray forces of conducting an attack on a military base in the region.

MOSCOW, (Sputnik) – The Ethiopia State of Emergency fact-checker on Wednesday accused BBC’s Monitoring service of spreading disinformation for attributing bellicose statements to Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed it said he never uttered.

The State of Emergency Fact Check Twitter account shared a now-deleted tweet by BBC Monitoring which quotes Ahmed as saying that the military operations in the restive Tigray region will go on regardless of civilian casualties.

Ethiopia State of Emergency Fact Check

@SOEFactCheck

We would like to alert all that PM @AbiyAhmedAli has never said these quoted words and hold @BBCMonitoring responsible for spreading disinformation. The tweet has been deleted 4 hours after spreading something that was never said. @BBCWorld

Image

8:47 AM · Nov 25, 2020

647211 people are Tweeting about this

​The BBC Monitoring service analyzes media trends worldwide and provides daily rundowns of regional news coverage on a subscriber basis. As a subsidiary of the BBC World Service, it is backed by the UK’s Foreign Office and is separate from the license fee-based public broadcaster in the UK.

Fighting erupted in northern Ethiopia earlier this month

when the central government accused the Tigray region’s political forces of conducting an attack on a military base in the region. The brewing standoff came to a head after the region’s authorities pushed ahead with general elections without an OK from Addis Ababa. The elections saw an overwhelming victory for the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), a political force that dominated Ethiopian politics for nearly two decades before being ousted from power by Ahmed’s new government in 2019.