An agreement on military cooperation between France and Ethiopia has been suspended by Paris amid the ongoing conflict in the African country’s north.
According to two official sources with knowledge of the issue disclosed on Friday that the deal agreement between Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and President Emmanuel Macron in March 2019 was suspended at the beginning of July.
Macron and Abiy had made an agreement in which France would loan 85 million euros ($100 million) to support landlocked Ethiopia’s ambition to build a navy.
Abiy was awarded the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize for his role in helping to end the decades-long conflict with neighboring Eritrea.
But international partners have grown increasingly concerned with his leadership as the conflict in the northern Tigray region intensifies.
Northern Ethiopia has been wracked by conflict since November when Abiy sent troops to topple the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), which dominated national politics for nearly three decades before Abiy took office.
He said the move came in response to TPLF attacks on federal army camps. But while Abiy promised a swift victory, more than nine months later the TPLF has made advances into the neighboring Afar and Amhara regions.
Aid workers are struggling to reach cutoff populations with 400,000 facing famine-like conditions in Tigray, according to the United Nations.
On Tuesday, Abiy’s office issued a statement calling for “all capable Ethiopians who are of age” to join the armed forces as the conflict escalates.
The TPLF has said it is not seeking to reclaim power at the national level and is instead focused on “degrading” pro-government troops and trying to facilitate aid access to Tigray.