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[dehai-news] (VOA) Principal anti-Eritrea UN Investigator says too early to lift Eritrean sanctions

From: Biniam Tekle <biniamt_at_dehai.org_at_dehai.org>
Date: Tue, 17 Jul 2012 21:54:10 -0400

http://blogs.voanews.com/breaking-news/2012/07/17/un-investigator-too-early-to-lift-eritrean-sanctions/

UN Investigator: Too Early to Lift Eritrean Sanctions
Posted Tuesday, July 17th, 2012 at 7:15 pm

The head of the United Nations monitoring group on Somalia and Eritrea
says it is too early to lift U.N. sanctions against Eritrea, despite a
report suggesting the Asmara government no longer actively supports
Somali al-Shabab insurgents.

U.N. coordinator Matt Bryden spoke to VOA Tuesday.

“While we've seen some improvement, I don't think we see enough and we
suggest that it will be too early to lift sanctions.”

The Security Council imposed an arms embargo on Eritrea and Somalia in
2009, on concerns that officials were providing financial assistance
and weapons to al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab insurgents. Eritrea has
repeatedly denied the charges.

Bryden's call for caution comes just hours after Eritrea's U.N. envoy
said existing sanctions should be lifted. The envoy cited a pending
U.N. report that says investigators found no evidence of Eritrean
support for armed groups in Somalia in the past year.

The U.N. report — seen by VOA — attributes the reduction in Eritrean
support to enhanced international monitoring and al-Shabab's
battlefield failures.

Bryden also said Somali officials linked in the report to the alleged
theft of public funds could be hit with U.N. sanctions prohibiting
travel and freezing foreign assets.

“It's quite possible that some of those named in the report will
eventually be designated. But this decision is for the Council and its
member states. When the final version of the report is released [in a
few days], there will be evidence in the public domain.”

Somalia has not had a fully-functioning government since 1991. Armed
militias held power in Mogadishu until August 2011, when African Union
and Somali government troops pushed al-Shabab militants out of the
capital.

The U.N.-backed government that took over barely operates outside the
city. Its U.N. mandate expires August 20.
Received on Wed Jul 18 2012 - 12:41:28 EDT
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