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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Peace efforts fail to halt Ethiopia-Eritrea war
By David Rowan
13 June 2000
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Fighting between Ethiopia and Eritrea has intensified over
the past few weeks despite peace talks sponsored by the United
Nations and mediated by the Organisation for African Unity (OAU).
The United States and the European Union (EU) also have representatives
at the talks in the Algerian capital Algiers.
Last month, both sides ignored a UN deadline to end the fighting,
despite a high-profile intervention in the region by Richard Holbrooke,
US ambassador to the United Nations. The UN subsequently imposed
a ban on arms sales to both Ethiopia and Eritrea.
Fierce fighting has now resumed on the western front, around
the Eritrean towns of Guluj and Tesseney. Ethiopia claimed it
was to deal with "provocative attacks" made by the Eritrean
army, whilst the Eritrean government said that Ethiopia had started
the fighting. Eritrea has agreed to sign the peace proposals and
to accept the deployment of a peacekeeping force. Ethiopia, which
has been on the offensive in this last stage of the two-year conflict,
asked for time to consider the proposals.
On May 25, following a three-week Ethiopian offensive into
western Eritrea, the Eritrean government agreed to pull its troops
out of the disputed southern and western regions of Eritrea in
line with OAU proposals. The Ethiopian government began occupying
areas left by the Eritrean army and called for the OAU proposals
to be modified to take into account its military victory and the
land it had gained.
The talks in Algeria have had little impact on finding a peaceful
solution to the conflict and are instead being used as a means
to ratify land gained through the war and to strengthen respective
negotiating positions. The policy of the Ethiopian government
was summed up by one official, who said that Addis Ababa was "fighting
while negotiating and negotiating by fighting".
Over the last week the Ethiopian army has concentrated its
fighting around the Eastern Bure region, about 70 kilometres from
the strategic Red Sea port of Assab. Control of the port was always
a key aim for landlocked Ethiopia, not simply regaining the disputed
territory in the western region of Badme. The clash between the
two extremely poor countries revolves around economics and trading
relations, particularly the advantages that Eritrea gained after
independence in 1993 by controlling Ethiopia's main access to
the sea.
The Ethiopian air force recently bombed Asmara airport in Eritrea
and the Irafayle and Hagigo power plants, using MIG 23 fighter
planes. This was part of a renewed offensive at the Bure front
near port Assab. Before the recent round of fighting in the western
region of Tesseney, it was reported that the Eritrean army repulsed
an Ethiopian attack with 3,700 Ethiopian soldiers killed or wounded.
The Ethiopian government says it has now driven Eritrean forces
out of all the disputed territory it had occupied since the war
began in May 1998.
The prime minister of Ethiopia, Meles Zenawi, recently went
on state television and called for international peacekeepers
to be used as a buffer force in disputed regions.
He said, "We want an international force to be deployed before
our troops leave the Eritrean places they hold."
The war has cost the lives of an estimated 100,000 people and
costs $1 million per day. Reports from the UN and relief agencies
working in Eritrea put the number of Eritreans displaced by the
war at 750,000.The UN stated that the humanitarian crisis throughout
the Horn of Africa was reaching "historical proportions".
It is reported that at least 60,000 people have fled into the
Kassala region of Sudan and that a further 50,000 people are gathered
at Tesseney on the Sudanese border. The United Nations Commission
for Refugees reported on May 29 that an estimated 10,000 people
fled into Sudan in 24 hours to avoid renewed fighting. A quarter
of those fleeing are women and 65 to 70 percent are children.
Relief agencies stated that the majority of those displaced
by fighting were from the western grain-producing Gash Barha region
of Eritrea. This area is already badly affected by drought and
the disruption to planting threatens to wipe out the next harvest.
A UN aid worker said that as a result of the war Eritrea would
be dependent on food aid for the next year. The entire Horn region
has been affected by drought for the last three years, threatening
the lives of eight million Ethiopians and one million Eritreans.
The UN estimates that up to 30 million people are at risk in the
region and said that an extra $378 million is needed for emergency
food aid, water and medical supplies.
A number of camps have been set up to the south of the Eritrean
capital Asmara. There are 48,000 refugees in Hariena, 51,000 in
Debat and 56,000 in Salina. Conditions are very poor, with three
families sharing one tent and others sleeping outside on rubber
sheeting. Cases of respiratory infections and diarrhoea are beginning
to grow and aid workers said the risk of disease would be heightened
with the expected rains.
See Also:
Fighting intensifies in the
Ethiopia-Eritrea conflict
[25 May 2000]
Ethiopia
and Eritrea
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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