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Eritrea,Ethiopia:
Security Council extends UN mission
30 January 2008 (United Nations) –Expressing its deep concern over
the ongoing dispute between Ethiopia and Eritrea, the Security
Council voted today for a six-month extension of the mandate of the
United Nations peacekeeping mission monitoring the 2000 ceasefire
that ended the border war between the two countries.
In a unanimously adopted resolution, the Council called
on the two sides to “show maximum restraint and refrain from
any threat or use of force against each other, avoid provocative
military activities and put an end to the exchange of hostile
statements.”
The 15-member body also emphasized that “Eritrea
and Ethiopia bear the primary responsibility for achieving a
comprehensive and lasting settlement of the border dispute and
normalizing their relations.”
Despite a final and binding decision being handed down
in 2002 by the Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission (EEBC), the Horn
of Africa neighbours have been at an impasse on the demarcation of
their boundary with a military build-up in the border areas by both
sides.
Today’s resolution called on Eritrea to withdraw
all troops and heavy military equipment from the Temporary Security
Zone (TSZ) immediately and urged Ethiopia to decrease its military
forces in areas adjacent to the TSZ.
The Council also expressed its concern over the critical
fuel levels which are impeding UNMEE’s work, and demanded that
the Eritrean Government “resumes immediately fuel shipments to
UNMEE or allows UNMEE to import fuel without restrictions.”
Last week, Azouz Ennifar, the mission’s acting
head, told journalists after briefing the Security Council that UNMEE
has not been able to obtain fresh supplies of fuel in Eritrea since
the start of last December.
“These restrictions are paralyzing the mission and
its movements and making the living conditions of our civilian and
military staff on the ground extremely difficult,” he said.
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