MEKELE, Ethiopia — Gebreegziabher Berehe has stopped waiting for tourists to arrive as many worry about a return to war.
The tour guide in Ethiopia 's northern region of Tigray says his bookings have dried up, ATMs in the city of Mekele are empty and he is considering leaving a country where he can no longer afford to live.
''If war arises again, I think the situation will be even more severe than before,'' the 37-year-old Berehe said. ''My colleagues and I are now facing serious economic and moral crises, even before hearing the sound of any gun.''
There is a tense calm in Mekele, the regional capital, but tensions have been rising again between local authorities and Ethiopia's government in Addis Ababa, the federal capital.
The recent conflict
Tigray has been bracing for the possibility of renewed conflict after the parties signed a peace deal in November 2022, ending fighting that killed thousands of people as Ethiopian government troops, backed by allied forces from neighboring Eritrea, fought Tigrayan forces.
Now, Tigray's rulers accuse Ethiopian federal authorities of breaching that agreement with drone strikes. At the same time, Ethiopia's government accuses Eritrea of pivoting to mobilize and fund armed groups in Tigray, with which it shares a border.
In the feared scenario, Eritrea would team up with the Tigray People's Liberation Front, the group that governs Tigray, in armed hostilities against Ethiopian forces.