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UN
Chief Warns Against Total Pullout From Eritrea
10
April 2008,UNITED NATIONS -- In his latest report to the UN Security
Council yesterday, Wednesday 9 Apr. 08, UN chief Ban Ki-moon
reportedly warned that total withdrawal of peacekeepers from Eritrea
"could result in an escalation of tensions in the border area
with the risk of a resumption of open hostilities, despite
declarations by the two parties that they have no intention to
restart the war."
The
U.N. border mission, or UNMEE, has already withdrawn nearly 1,700
troops and military observers who for the past seven years had been
trying to prevent Eritrea and Ethiopia from resuming a border war
they fought from 1998-2000.
The
peacekeepers had been stationed in a 15.5-mile (25-km) buffer zone
inside Eritrea. But Asmara turned against UNMEE because of U.N.
inability to enforce rulings by an independent commission awarding
chunks of Ethiopian-held territory, including the town of Badme, to
Eritrea.
Most
UNMEE troops have been sent home temporarily and only 164
peacekeepers are now in Eritrea, Ban said in
the report, obtained by Reuters on Wednesday.
But those troops are only there to guard UNMEE equipment until
it can be evacuated.
There
are also a few peacekeepers on the Ethiopian side of the border, but
Ban said Addis Ababa told him: "Ethiopia would find it extremely
difficult to accept a long-term deployment of UNMEE limited only to
the Ethiopian side of the border."
UNMEE
pulled most of its troops out of Eritrea after the government cut off
access to fuel and restricted deliveries of food and other essential
supplies. Asmara denies this and accuses UNMEE of enabling Ethiopia
to occupy its territory.
Ethiopia
has offered to hold talks with Eritrea but Asmara says Addis Ababa
must first withdraw from Eritrean territory.
With
Eritrea refusing to discuss the question of UNMEE's return, Ban said
there were several options for the future of U.N. forces on the
border, where both sides have amassed troops in recent months. He
also said the Security Council must make a swift decision on the fate
of UNMEE.
"It
is essential that the Security Council makes the necessary decisions
as a matter of priority," he said. In the meantime Ban said he
could try to mediate between Ethiopia and Eritrea and the council
could also consider sending missions to both countries.
OPTIONS
One
option is to remove all UNMEE personnel from the area, though this
would be a very dangerous move to make, he said.
One
of the problems of withdrawing UNMEE from the border zone is that
their presence is required under the ceasefire agreement, which could
then be dismissed as invalid.
A
better option would be to deploy a small observer mission in the
border area, which could try to defuse tensions between Ethiopia and
Eritrea. This mission, Ban said, could "serve as the eyes and
ears of the international community and would continue to report to
the Security Council on the situation."
If one of the countries were to reject this option, observers could be placed on one side of the border, though that "could be perceived by one party as freezing the status quo and serving the interests of the other," Ban said.
Other
options would be for UNMEE to return to its original full deployment
-- an unlikely scenario given Eritrea's refusal to discuss the issue
-- or to establish "liaison offices with civilian and military
personnel" in Addis Ababa and Asmara.
In
his report to the U.N. Security Council, Ban urged Eritrea to restore
the U.N.'s ability to patrol its side of the border. If that doesn't
happen, the $113 million annual peacekeeping mission "could be
terminated," leading to increased hostilities, he warned.
As
a sign of rising tensions, he said, troops from both countries
exchanged gunfire several times in recent months.
"There
is still an opportunity for Eritrea to reconsider its position,"
Ban said.
But
Eritrea's U.N. Ambassador Araya Desta dismissed warnings of a new war
and said there was "no border dispute."
"We
didn't ask the U.N. to withdraw. This was done without consulting
Eritrea," he said. AP/Reuters
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