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Int'l
community must come down hard against Eritrea
February 20, 2008 (UN Dispatch)
A day after another U.S. primary, and as the partition
of northern Kosovo becomes more likely by the hour, the collapse
of the peacekeeping mission
along the Ethiopia-Eritrea border is understandably getting scant
attention. This is unfortunate, because the crisis facing the UN
mission there is one of the more disturbing developments facing UN
peacekeeping a long while.
What happened is this: For weeks, the government of
Eritrea has made it increasingly difficult for the mission, UNMEE,
to access diesel. With its fuel stocks dangerously low, the mission
decided to relocate to the Ethiopian side of the border. The Eritrean
military, however, has blocked them from reaching the border. Two
flatbeds carrying APCs and a number of personnel are currently being
detained and harassed by Eritrean militia in a remote border
crossing. Meanwhile, the rest of the 1,400 strong UNMEE has decided
to "regroup" in the Eritrean capitol, Asmara.
Ethiopia is not with out reproach. The Eritrean
hostility toward UNMEE stems in large part from an Eritrean
perception that the international community is not doing enough to
force Ethiopia to abide by binding arbitration which awarded a
disputed border town to Eritrea. Nevertheless, nothing can justify
this kind out outright harassment of UN peacekeepers. The
international community must come down hard against this kind of
behavior -- the precedent that it sets for other peacekeeping
missions is frankly dangerous. Flagrant violations of the accepted
rules of peacekeeping cannot be allowed to go unpunished. (Title
inserted editorially)
Posted by Mark Leon Goldberg at 12:29
PM
source:
http://www.undispatch.com/archives/2008/02/meanwhile_a_pea.php
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