The comments are a striking denunciation from someone so senior inside Ethiopia, where state media reflect the government's narrative and both independent journalists and Tigrayans have been intimidated and harassed. The video also comes as Ethiopia, facing multiple crises of sometimes deadly ethnic tensions, faces a national election on June 5.
Dennis Wadley, who runs the US-based Bridges of Hope organisation and has been a friend of the church leader for several years, told the AP he shot the video in an impulsive moment while visiting him last month in Ethiopia's capital, Addis Ababa.
"I just pulled out my iPhone and said if you want to get the word out, let's do it," Wadley said on Friday after arriving in the US. "He just poured out his heart. ... It's so sad. I actually hugged him; I never did that before."
A church official confirmed the video and the interest of Abune Mathias in making it public. The church patriarch serves alongside a recently returned exile, Abune Merkorios.
"I have said a lot of things but no one allows the message to be shared. Rather, it is being stifled and censored," Abune Mathias says in the video.
"Many barbarisms have been conducted" these days all over Ethiopia, he says, but "what is happening in Tigray is of the highest brutality and cruelty."
God will judge everything, he adds.
Ethiopia's government says it is "deeply dismayed" by the deaths of civilians, blames the former Tigray leaders and claims normality is returning in the region of some 6 million people. It has denied widespread profiling and targeting of Tigrayans.
But witnesses have told the AP about seeing bodies strewn on the ground on communities, Tigrayans rounded up and expelled and women raped by Ethiopian and allied forces including those from neighbouring Eritrea. Others have described family members and colleagues including priests being swept up and detained, often without charge.
Churches have been the scenes of massacres — one deacon in Axum has told the AP he believes some 800 people were killed in a November weekend at the church and around the city — and of mass graves.
"People were dropped over the ground like leaves," the patriarch says of Axum, Ethiopia's holiest city.
Abune Mathias, born in 1942, has been outspoken in the past. In 1980, he became the first leader of the church to denounce the rule of Ethiopia's communist regime "and was forced to live abroad for more than 30 years," according to the United Nations refugee agency.
- AP