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Eritrea
Opposition To Set Up Government In Exile
Mon 4 Feb 2008
ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - Eritrean opposition groups
trying to bring down President Isaias Afwerki plan to set up a
government in exile for the Red Sea state, an opposition leader said
on Monday from the Ethiopian capital.
A coalition of 13 groups will meet in Ethiopia in March
to elect a leader, cabinet and parliament, said Adehanom Gebremariam,
chairman of the Eritrean Peoples' Movement.
Adehanom said the group would decide on a strategy to
overthrow Isaias, who has ruled Eritrea as a one-party state since it
won independence from arch-foe Ethiopia in 1993.
"Our aim is to transform a one-man dictatorial rule
now prevailing in Eritrea into legal and democratic governance,"
Adehanom said in a statement.
Eritrean officials could not immediately be reached for
comment.
Eritrea and Ethiopia routinely accuse each other of
supporting opposition groups.
The two Horn of Africa nations have had bitter relations
since a 1998-2000 border war, and have been locked in a dispute over
their shared frontier since an independent commission gave Eritrea
the flashpoint town of Badme in 2002.
Critics scoff at Eritrean opposition groups for meeting
inside arch-foe Ethiopia -- Eritrea broke off from its former
imperial ruler in 1991 after a 30-year independence struggle.
Independence was formally declared in 1993.
Last week, the Eritrean government accused Ethiopia of
using "terrorist elements" to carry out a bomb attack
killing one person and wounding 8 others in a town on its border with
Sudan.
In December, Eritrea opposition groups met in the
historic city of Axum in northern Ethiopia to call for Isaias'
overthrow. Eritrea says it has no opposition.
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