Battle of Tiro

Battle of Tiro
Part of the Oromo conflict
DateAugust 1974
LocationTiro, Ethiopia
8°54′23″N 40°39′00″E / 8.906441°N 40.650047°E / 8.906441; 40.650047
Result Ethiopian military victory
Belligerents
Oromo Liberation Army Ethiopia
Commanders and leaders
Elemo Qiltu 
Ahmad Taqi 
Gen. Getachew Shibeshi
Strength
40–100 100–500
Casualties and losses
10–25 killed 80–90 killed

The Battle of Tiro was the last battle fought between the Oromo Liberation Army led by Elemo Qiltu, and Ethiopian government forces.[1]

Background

The first Oromo Liberation Army (OLA) unit was a small guerilla force that started out with twenty men (later grew exponentially) and operated in the mountains around the city of Gelemso. After the OLA killed Mulatu Tegegn, a notorious local landowner, the government sent General Getachew Shibeshi and a large force to deal with the guerilla army. The General was unable to deal any decisive blows against Elemo's troops but was able to keep them pinned in the Chercher Mountains. The OLA unit eventually snuck away from the Chercher Mountains and made their way to Tiro, a mountainous region between the towns of Gelemso, Bokhe Tiko and Badhesa.

Battle

In late August 1974, the Oromo Liberation Army unit came down from the Chercher Mountains and made their way closer to Gelemso hoping that the fully grown crops would be able to hide them from General Getachew's troops as they made their way closer to the surrounding towns of Bokhe Tiko, Gelemso and Badhesa. They had chosen a mountain in the area of Tiro as a new base of operations and proceeded to climb it. Three of their new recruits; Hundee Taqi, Sheikh Jamal and Colonel Mahdi were unacustomed to climbing long distances so they spent the night around the bottom of the mountains while the rest of the soldiers camped at the top.[2]

When a soldier was sent to retrieve the recruits, it was discovered that the three had been killed by a government militia that had followed the unit to Tiro. Before long, police and more mlilitia men from the three nearby towns started arriving at the base of the mountain surrounding it. The Oromo Liberation Army soldiers took high positions and began to engage these troops managing to kill most of the poorly trained militia. Elemo Qiltu, the OLA commander, was injured and so he descended down from the mountain and began to engage troops from the surrounding crop fields.[2]

The fighting continued from dawn till noon when the General Getachew's troops finally arrived from the Chercher Mountains and began to shell the mountain. The government troops also surrounded Elemo Qiltu which led to his surrender. He called for the soldiers to come and pick him since he was injured, but blew himself up with a grenade as the Ethiopian soldiers approached him. The government troops managed to get midway up the mountain, capturing a few rebels but were unable to capture the rest who broke their lines and escaped.[2]

Aftermath

The Ethiopian government punished the population in the area by instigating a wave of mass arrests and killings in the surrounding towns of Gelemso, Boke, Badhesa, Mechere and Balbaleti. The armed wing of the Oromo Liberation Front never restarted until 1976 when the Front was reorganized and officially formed.[3]

References

  1. "Ahmad Taqi".
  2. 1 2 3 "2004 Interview with Dhugassa Bakako, survivor of the Battle of Tiro". 2004.
  3. "Birth of the Oromo Liberation Front".
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