Heavy casualties reported in Ethiopia air strike
Dozens of people have reportedly been killed or injured after Ethiopia’s air force bombed a market in the northern region of Tigray.
Eyewitnesses told the BBC the Ethiopian air force struck the town of Togoga on Tuesday, 25 km (15 miles) from the region’s capital, Mekelle.
The Ethiopian military denied targeting civilians, saying it carried out the strikes to neutralise “terrorists”.
Tigrayan rebel forces are said to have made advances in recent days.
However, this has been denied by the Ethiopian government.
Thousands of people have been killed and millions displaced after conflict erupted almost eight months ago.
What happened in the strikes?
Doctors at the main hospital in Mekelle say they are treating dozens of people, including a two-year-old child left injured by the air strike.
Medical personnel told Reuters the Ethiopian military blocked them from reaching the site of the attack to help others left behind.
A 16-year-old boy told the BBC from Aider referral hospital that he was struck in the hand by shrapnel and that he saw several people thrown on the ground. He said that the air strike killed a man he knew.
Ethiopia’s army said the strikes were against military targets.
“We never carried out an air strike on the market place. How is this possible? The army is capable of accurately hitting its targets. We conducted air strikes, but only on certain targets,” a spokeswoman said.