But everything changed in early November when conflict broke out in the region, and armed men took her husband.
After being held for seven days, he was released, but the experience left the family with an ominous feeling, wondering what they should do now.
That night, Tsige slept outside with her daughter, while her husband spent the night at another house. The following day, a tough decision was made.
She knew it was no longer safe to stay at their farm.
“I told my family we have to leave. I told my husband to take our son and I would follow with our daughter,” explains Tsige. “We will meet there but we must run.”
“We are just here sleeping on the ground, without even a change of clothes.”
The family fled to Sudan, not knowing whether they would ever see one another again.
Unlike many families who have been separated in flight, they were reunited in Hamdayet. Tsige and her family are now safe, but struggling to cope.
“We are just here sleeping on the ground, without even a change of clothes,” adds Tsige.
Just over 50,000 Ethiopians have fled to Sudan to date, following escalating conflict in Ethiopia’s Tigray region. UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, together with the Sudanese authorities, has moved some 14,000 refugees from Hamdayet and Abderafi border points to Um Rakuba camp, situated some 70 kilometres away from the Ethiopian border. Most of the refugees in the camp and those crossing into Sudan, many of them women and children, are desperate for food, shelter, clean water, sanitation and health care.
“The needs are overwhelming. The Hamdayet transit centre which was orginally built to house hundreds, now has thousands living there,” said Andrew Mbogori, UNHCR’s Principal Emergency Coordinator in Sudan. “It’s located in such a remote area and it has been challenging to upgrade facilities to minimum standards.”
Mbogori adds that there is also a real concern of outbreaks of waterborne diseases and the spread of COVID-19.
Like Tsige, Nigsty, was enjoying her life at home as a housewife with her husband, who worked on a farm as a truck driver. But the conflict forced them to leave everything behind.
Heavily pregnant at the time, she fell sick during the three-day journey and was increasingly worried about her unborn child.
“I was so scared – my stomach was in pain and the situation was very hard. I did not expect to deliver my baby safely,” adds Nigsty, who delivered a baby girl just days after arriving in the camp.
Though grateful for finding safety in Sudan, she is worried about her extended family, who are unaware of their whereabouts or that she has delivered the baby.
“How will they know? I don’t even know where they are. There is no phone or internet – everything is closed,” she cries. “We are worried about them, we don’t know whether they are alive or not.”
In Ethiopia, UNHCR staff and partners in Shire town have already distributed water, high energy biscuits, clothes, mattresses, sleeping mats and blankets to an estimated 5,000 internally displaced Ethiopians.