International law compels action when states commit atrocities against their own people
Latest Stories
A Rejoinder to Abrar Fitwi’s “National Unity for Survival”
The TPLF is too deformed to be reformed
‘If There Were No Laws for 24 Hours’: Misogyny, Masculinity, and...
Exploring how systemic failures and misogyny shape young men’s violent fantasies.
Egypt’s Expanding Footprint in Somalia
As Cairo entrenches itself in the Horn, Somaliland lies at the hinge of the region’s power...
Failed Guardians: Ethiopia’s Intellectuals and the Cycle of...
The nation’s intellectuals and power brokers have too often chosen silence or complicity, leaving...
Guns Over Governance: The Militarization of Tigray’s...
From battlefield glory to political decay—Tigray’s generals tighten their grip.
Unity in Shards: Ethiopia’s Three Decades of Ethnic Federalism
An experiment in ethnic sovereignty promised stability but has instead deepened division, violence...
Two Herdsmen, Two Memories, One City: The Tale of Jigjiga
Two memories collide in a city scarred by history yet embracing change.
“National Unity for Survival”: From Words to Action
Tigray’s survival depends on credible reform, not campaign rhetoric.