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Peace Talks on Ethiopia's Tigray Conflict Are Extended  


FILE - Former Nigerian president Olusegun Obasanjo (2ndL) is greeted as he arrives for the peace talks between the Ethiopian government and Tigrayan People's Liberation Front at the Department of International Relations and Cooperation headquarters in Pretoria, Oct. 26, 2022.
FILE - Former Nigerian president Olusegun Obasanjo (2ndL) is greeted as he arrives for the peace talks between the Ethiopian government and Tigrayan People's Liberation Front at the Department of International Relations and Cooperation headquarters in Pretoria, Oct. 26, 2022.

Peace talks between warring sides on Ethiopia’s Tigray conflict have been extended into Monday.

An official familiar with the arrangements for the talks confirms that discussions continue in South Africa between Ethiopia’s federal government and representatives from the northern Tigray region.

The African Union-led talks seek a cessation of hostilities in a war that the United States asserts has killed up to hundreds of thousands of people, an estimate made by some academics and health workers.

The first formal peace talks began last week, and South Africa’s government had said they would end Sunday. Representatives of the warring sides have not responded to questions.

Neighboring Eritrea, whose forces are fighting alongside Ethiopian ones, is not a party to the talks, and it is not clear whether the deeply repressive country will respect any agreement reached. Witnesses have told the AP that Eritreans were killing civilians even after the talks began.

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