OAU Team Postpones Visit To Asmara

PANA; April 13 1999

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (PANA) - An OAU team has postponed a visit to Asmara which was expected to begin Tuesday as a follow-up effort to end the 11-month old border conflict between Ethiopia and Eritrea.

Diplomatic sources in Addis Ababa suggested that the mission could not leave Tuesday because of sudden calendar hitches. No new date has been set for the visit, the sources added.

The visit was announced Monday by the acting head of the press and information division of the OAU, Justin Thundu, who told journalists that the OAU was ''very keen'' for a peaceful resolution of the conflict, as both parties had indicated their readiness in favour of a peaceful settlement through the OAU framework agreement.

In March this year, a similar team visited authorities in Addis Ababa and Asmara to convey the continental body's concern over the ongoing fighting.



Ethiopia-Eritrea-OAU

VOA; April 13 1999

DATE=4/13/99
TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT
NUMBER=5-43093
TITLE=ETHIOPIA / ERITREA / O-A-U
BYLINE=SCOTT STEARNS
DATELINE=ADDIS ABABA
 

INTRO:  DIPLOMATS FROM THE ORGANIZATION OF AFRICAN UNITY  (O-A-U)
ARE TRYING TO END THE BORDER WAR BETWEEN ETHIOPIA AND ERITREA.  
AS V-O-A'S SCOTT STEARNS REPORTS FROM ADDIS ABABA, BOTH COUNTRIES
HAVE ACCEPTED A PEACE PLAN, BUT THERE IS STILL  NO  PEACE.

TEXT:  IN CONTINUING EFFORTS TO STOP THE FIGHTING, O-A-U 
SPOKESMAN JUSTIN THUNDU SAYS THE PAN-AFRICAN ORGANIZATION IS 
STILL TRYING TO FIND COMMON GROUND BETWEEN THESE FORMER ALLIES.

                      ///  THUNDU ACT   ///

         YOU ARE TALKING OF A WAR SITUATION HERE, AND YOU HAVE 
         THE O-A-U HERE VERY, VERY KEEN AT PEACEMAKING.  SO YOU 
         CAN TAKE IT FROM THERE THAT THIS IS AN ATTEMPT, AS WE 
         HAVE DONE IN THE PAST, TO BRING THE TWO PARTIES 
         TOGETHER, TALK TO THEM, AND SEE WHETHER WE CAN ARRIVE AT
         AN AGREEMENT.

                        ///  END ACT  ///

THE O-A-U ALREADY HAS AN AGREEMENT THAT BOTH COUNTRIES SAY THEY 
HAVE ACCEPTED.  UNDER THIS PLAN, ETHIOPIA AND ERITREA WOULD BOTH 
PULL BACK THEIR TROOPS WITH INTERNATIONAL MONITORS CONTROLLING 
DISRUPTED AREAS WHILE A BORDER COMMISSION DRAWS UP A NEW BORDER 
MAP.

ERITREA SAYS IT IS READY TO GO AHEAD WITH THE PLAN, WITHDRAWING 
TROOPS AT THE SAME TIME AS ETHIOPIA.  ETHIOPIAN FOREIGN MINISTER 
SEYOUM MESFIN SAYS ERITREA MUST FIRST PULL OUT OF AREAS 
ADMINISTERED BY ETHIOPIA BEFORE FIGHTING BEGAN LAST MAY.  THEN, 
ONCE LOCAL ETHIOPIAN AUTHORITY IS RESTORED, ETHIOPIA SAYS IT WILL
BE READY FOR A CEASEFIRE AND DEMILITARIZATION.

FOREIGN MINISTER SEYOUM SAYS ANYTHING LESS ON ERITREA'S PART IS A
CLEAR INDICATION OF ITS WILLINGNESS TO TRY ETHIOPIA'S PATIENCE.

                      ///  SEYOUM ACT  ///

         OUR UNLIMITED READINESS TO COOPERATE WITH THIRD PARTIES 
         WHO HAVE WORKED FOR PEACE, OUR PATIENCE IN THE FACE OF 
         AGGRESSION, AND OUR FLEXIBILITY SHOULD  NOT  BE MISTAKEN
         FOR BEING PRONE TO BEING PUSHED AROUND. 

                        ///  END ACT  ///

CONFUSION ABOUT THE O-A-U PLAN RESTS WITH THE O-A-U ITSELF.  IN 
ANSWERING ERITREA'S QUESTIONS ABOUT SPECIFICS OF THE DEAL, THE 
O-A-U TOLD PRESIDENT ISAYAS AFEWORKI THAT WITHDRAWING FROM THE 
BORDER TOWN OF BADAME AND ITS ENVIRONS MEANS WITHDRAWING FROM THE
TOWN AND THE VILLAGES AROUND IT.

ETHIOPIAN PRIME MINISTER MELES ZENAWI AGREED TO THE PLAN ON THE 
UNDERSTANDING THAT BADAME AND ITS ENVIRONS MEANS BADAME AND ALL 
OTHER TERRITORY ADMINISTERED BY ETHIOPIA ONE YEAR AGO, INCLUDING 
AREAS HUNDREDS OF KILOMETERS FARTHER EAST.

THE O-A-U SAYS IT HAS TAKEN NOTE OF THE PRIME MINISTER'S 
POSITION, LEADING ETHIOPIANS TO CONCLUDE THAT THAT IS WHAT THE 
DEAL MEANS.  BUT THAT IS  NOT  WHAT ERITREA THINKS THE DEAL 
MEANS.

ASKED BY THE UNITED NATIONS TO CLARIFY THE PLAN, THE O-A-U HAS 
FAILED TO RESOLVE THE VARYING INTERPRETATIONS OF THE PHRASE 
"BADAME AND ITS ENVIRONS."

ERITREAN PRESIDENT ISAYAS SAYS IT IS MORE DELAY FROM AN 
ORGANIZATION THAT HAS BEEN LESS THAN SUCCESSFUL IN RESOLVING 
AFRICAN CONFLICTS.

                      ///  ISAYAS ACT  ///

         THIS IS A TEST CASE FOR THE O-A-U.  THE O-A-U AND ITS 
         HISTORY SINCE 1964 AND THE CONFLICTS THAT HAVE ERUPTED 
         IN THIS CONTINENT, ITS ROLE IN RESOLVING THEM IS IN THE 
         RECORDS OF HISTORY.  THE LIMITATIONS OF THE O-A-U ARE 
         VERY OBVIOUS TO EVERYONE.  WE HAVE BEEN BLAMED FOR BEING
         CRITICAL, BUT WE HAVE  NOT  BEEN CRITICAL.  WE HAVE BEEN
         VERY FRANK WITH THIS ORGANIZATION.

                        ///  END ACT  ///

WITH NEITHER SIDE WILLING TO RECONSIDER ITS INTERPRETATION OF THE
PLAN AND THE O-A-U ITSELF SHOWING LITTLE LEADERSHIP IN RESOLVING 
THE DIFFERENCES, HISTORIAN PATRICK GILKES SAYS WHAT SHOULD BE A 
RELATIVELY EASY BORDER PROBLEM TO SORT OUT COULD BECOME ANOTHER 
EXTENDED CONFLICT IN THE HORN OF AFRICA.

                      ///  GILKES ACT  ///

         THERE IS AN OBVIOUS POSSIBILITY SINCE THIS CONFLICT HAS 
         GONE ON FOR NEARLY A YEAR WITHOUT BEING SETTLED DESPITE 
         VERY CONSIDERABLE PRESSURE, EVEN IF IT HAS  NOT  BEEN 
         SUCCESSFUL, BY VARIOUS ELEMENTS OF THE INTERNATIONAL 
         COMMUNITY, BY THE O-A-U, THAT IF IT HAS GONE ON FOR A 
         YEAR LIKE THIS, THAT THERE SEEMS THERE TO BE  NO  REAL 
         REASON WHY, IF ONE WANTS TO BE TOTALLY PESSIMISTIC, WHY 
         IT SHOULDN'T GO ON FOR ANOTHER YEAR OR MORE. BOTH SIDES 
         APPEAR TO BE PREPARED TO ACCEPT A CONTINUATION. 

                        ///  END ACT  ///

IN THE LAST BIG ROUND OF FIGHTING ON THE CENTRAL TSORONA FRONT, 
ERITREA SAYS IT KILLED 10-THOUSAND ETHIOPIANS.  ETHIOPIA SAYS IT 
KILLED AND WOUNDED NINE-THOUSAND ERITREANS.  EACH COUNTRY BLAMES 
THE OTHER FOR CONTINUING THE FIGHT WITH MORE THAN 300-THOUSAND 
TROOPS DUG-IN ALONG THEIR ROCKY BORDER, MOST NOW CONCENTRATED ON 
THE WESTERN BADAME FRONT.  (SIGNED)

NEB/SKS/JWH

13-Apr-99 6:45 AM EDT (1045 UTC)
NNNN
Source: Voice of America




Efforts to recover stolen Ethiopian artefacts

BBC; April 13 1999

A committee has been set up in Ethiopia to try to secure the return of hundreds of precious manuscripts and religious icons looted by the British in 1868.

The artefacts were taken from a citadel in the mountain stronghold of Magdala, when British forces were dispatched to rescue a group of British nationals taken hostage there.

The committee says the looted treasures include a royal crown, a sacred chalice, and more than four hundred manuscripts currently held in libraries across Britain including six in the royal collection at Windsor Castle. Last year, Italy agreed to return an obelisk, taken from the ancient town of Axum when Italian forces invaded Ethiopia in the nineteen thirties.

From the newsroom of the BBC World Service



Back to Conflict NewsPage