[dehai-news] (IRIN) Eritrea: UNMEE's termination was 'overdue'


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From: Biniam Haile \(SWE\) (eritrea.lave@comhem.se)
Date: Fri Aug 01 2008 - 17:56:59 EDT


ETHIOPIA-ERITREA: Urgent need for dialogue after departure of UNMEE,
says analyst
 
NAIROBI/ADDIS ABABA, 1 August 2008 (IRIN) - Tensions between Ethiopia
and Eritrea are unlikely to escalate immediately following the departure
of UN peacekeepers, but a mechanism should be found to quickly engage
the two neighbours, an analyst said.
 
The Security Council terminated the UN Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea
(UNMEE) on 31 July.
 
"The decision is basically a formalisation of the reality because UNMEE
has really not been on the ground," Fouad Hikmat, Horn of Africa
director for the International Crisis Group (ICG), told IRIN.
 
Ethiopia and Eritrea have both said a return to conflict is unlikely,
but other analysts fear an accidental trigger or clash could ignite the
situation, leading to a flare-up in the absence of a buffer.
 
"Both countries do not want to go to war, but the situation is very
sensitive and the troops are close to each other," Hikmat added.
"Hopefully the two will now try to engage."
 
UNMEE has begun removing its equipment and assets, including 320
military personnel, in Ethiopia. "The mission was sent at the request of
both countries to keep the peace after a two-year war claimed at least
70,000 Ethiopian and Eritrean lives," UNMEE's acting head Azouz Ennifar,
said.
 
"It was a difficult mission in geographically harsh locations, but the
men and women who served ... did not flinch."
 
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon regretted the decision, saying both
parties had rejected options for a possible follow-on presence that had
been suggested at the request of the Council.
 
"[The Secretary-General] expresses hope that the parties would be able
to break the current stalemate and create conditions necessary for the
normalisation of their relations, which is key to peace and stability in
the region," he said.
 
Hikmat called for the appointment of an international envoy to
kick-start an engagement between the two. "There is no clear mechanism
for engagement at the moment," he told IRIN on 1 August. "A special
envoy could energise the process of engagement."
 
Responding to the Council decision, Ethiopia said dialogue was the best
way to resolve the stalemate, but added that Eritrea had frustrated
UNMEE and retained a "provocative" stance. "Ethiopia has a firm stand
that the conflict between Ethiopia and Eritrea ought to be solved
through peaceful means," an information ministry statement said.
 
Eritrea said UNMEE's termination was "overdue". "UNMEE's presence was
really symbolic, it was not a peace enforcement force, it does not have
the capability of deterrent - so it's not going to have any impact,"
spokesman Yemane Gebremeskel told the BBC.
 
"Legally Ethiopia's occupation of Eritrea is untenable - it cannot be
accepted by the international community - I think our focus has been on
the legal end and the diplomatic dimensions of the issue," he added.
 
Border tensions
 
The two countries fought a bloody war from 1998-2000 over their 1,000km
border. A peace accord signed in Algiers in 2000 set up an independent
commission to defuse tensions by defining the border.
 
The commission issued a ruling in 2002 placing Badme, a symbolic border
town over which the war had broken out, in Eritrea. Physical demarcation
of the commission-defined border on the ground never took place.
 
Amid rising tensions, a 4,200-strong UN force was deployed to monitor
the cessation of hostilities and to help ensure the observance of
security commitments by both parties.
 
But relations between Eritrea and UNMEE deteriorated, forcing an end to
military operations. UNMEE helicopter flights were stopped and fuel
supplies cut. Without enough fuel, the force found itself unable to
transport personnel, generate electricity and refrigerate food or
medical supplies.
 
War risks
 
In June, the ICG warned that the border impasse carried serious risks of
a new war and was a major source of instability in the Horn of Africa,
most critically for Somalia.
 
"Both regimes have used it as an excuse to enhance their domestic power
at the expense of democracy and economic growth, thus reducing the
attractiveness to them of diplomatic compromise," it warned in a report,
Beyond the Fragile Peace between Ethiopia and Eritrea: Averting New War.

 
"They support the other's domestic rebels, and each is convinced that
the fall of the other's regime is imminent and the only real solution to
the border dispute."
 
ICG called for a virtual demarcation of the border, transformation of
UNMEE into a more mobile, faster-reacting tripwire mechanism and the
appointment by the UN of a special negotiator to manage an alternative
forum for dialogue.
 
"The immediate priority is to persuade Ethiopia to withdraw its troops
from all land the [border commission] awarded Eritrea and for Eritrea to
pull its army back from the TSZ [Transitional Security Zone]," the ICG
warned.
 
eo/tw/mw
 
 
Theme(s): (IRIN) Conflict, (IRIN) Early Warning
 
[ENDS]
 
 
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=79573
 

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