The post contains a screenshot of a purported letter from Lion International Bank, a private financial institution in Ethiopia. In Amharic, the equivalent name for the bank is Anbessa.
Addressed to the Ethiopian defence ministry, the document has all the appearances of an official dispatch.
“The Ministry of Defence of the FDRE was established to uphold the constitution and our bank is committed to supporting the government’s fight against extremist forces in the Amhara region,” it reads.
FDRE refers to the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia.
“Therefore, we would like to announce that the Board of Directors of Anbessa Bank has pledged its support to this sacred action and provided two hundred million (200,000,000) birr to our defence forces… Rest assured that similar support will continue in the future.”
The US dollar equivalent of two hundred million birr is around $3.4 million.
The letter carries the bank’s seal and features what looks like the signature of its vice president of resources management, Gebru Meshesha.
Similar posts were also shared on Facebook here and here.
Renewed regional dispute
Fighting between the Ethiopian army and the Fano militia group has plagued the Amhara region since July 2023.
The conflict widened in mid-April when forces from the Tigray region clashed with Fano over disputed areas including Alamata and Raya Alamata. The United Nations stated more than 50,000 people were displaced from the contested territories (archived here).
The African Union (AU) also expressed deep concern (archived here) about the escalating tensions and called on all parties to “urgently halt hostilities”.
Amharan troops occupied Raya Alamata in southern Tigray during the two-year war between Ethiopia’s military and regional Tigrayan forces. Amhara forces, who backed the federal army during the conflict, were meant to withdraw under a 2022 peace deal but never did.
In Ethiopia, banks are established along ethnic lines (archived here) and attract customers from the same ethnic group. In the case of Lion Bank, the owners and founders are mainly from Tigray (archived here).
However, the letter circulating online is a hoax.
Fabricated letter
AFP Fact Check used an authentic letter from the bank found on its official Facebook page to compare both versions.
Although not easily visible in online copies, we noted that letters (archived here) from the bank typically feature a watermark of the company’s logo — an element missing in the fabricated document.