The Tigray Peace Force (TPF) (Tigrinya: áÂÂáÂÂá á°áÂÂá áµáÂÂá«áÂÂ, Ḥayli Selam TÃÂgray) is a rebel group and political organization in the Tigray Region of Ethiopia. The TPF emerged as a rebel splinter group formed by disgruntled former members of the Tigray Defense Forces (TDF) and the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF), after the deep internal division and schism formed following the Pretoria Agreement that ended the Tigray War in 2022. The TPF defines itself by a core ideology of reform, resistance to the status quo, and the push for separation of party and state in post-war Tigray.
The TPF is explicitly positioned in ideological conflict with the long-established political and military leadership of the TDF and the ruling faction of the TPLF.
The emergence of the TPF is a direct consequence of the escalating political fragmentation within Tigray after the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement (CoHA) was signed in Pretoria in November 2022. This period witnessed a significant internal power struggle between two main TPLF factions:
The TPF is widely viewed as the vanguard of the reform movement and arose in resistance to the military leadership's alleged implicit support for the faction defending the status quo. It gained visibility when it resisted efforts to restore entrenched TPLF dominance after the reform-leaning administration began advocating for change. A key reported leader of the TPF is former TDF officer, Brigadier General Gebreegzabher Beyene, who claims to have organized four military divisions from the Afar region, stating his aim is to create a force independent from Tigrayan parties.
The TPF functions primarily as an ideological resistance movement challenging the political monopoly of the pre-war elite, rather than a conventional replacement for the TDF.
Analysts characterize the tension between the TDF leadership and the TPF as a clash of two fundamentally different worldviews: the TDF representing the defense of the status quo, and the TPF demanding fundamental political renewal. Reports indicate that TDF members who disagree with the commanders' decision to support the TPLF establishment have been defecting to join the TPF.
The rivalry has led to intermittent armed clashes, particularly in Southern Tigray near the border with the Afar Region, where the TPF is reported to organize.
In December 2025, reporting by The Africa Report described the Tigray Peace Force (TPF) as a rebel group formed by former members of the Tigray Defense Forces and mid-level TPLF commanders dissatisfied with the post-Pretoria political settlement. According to the report, the group has operated along the TigrayâÂÂAfar borderlands, conducting armed operations that contributed to renewed insecurity in Afar and southern Tigray. Analysts cited by the publication warned that clashes involving the TPF risk undermining EthiopiaâÂÂs fragile post-war peace and transforming Afar into a proxy battleground for internal Tigrayan political rivalries.