From: Biniam Haile \(SWE\) (eritrea.lave@comhem.se)
Date: Tue Sep 29 2009 - 21:41:49 EDT
Djibouti calls on Security Council to act to resolve border dispute with
Eritrea
September 2009 - The Security Council must take steps to solve the
border dispute between Djibouti and Eritrea, Djibouti said today,
warning that if the row is allowed to fester it will set a dangerous
precedent for other crises around the world.
Roble Olhaye, Djibouti's Permanent Representative to the UN, told the
final day of the General Assembly's annual high-level segment that the
Council needs to use "all means at its disposal" to end the stand-off
between the African neighbours.
In June last year, following weeks of rising tensions and military
build-up, the two countries' armed forces clashed over an un-demarcated
area in the Red Sea known as Doumeira, killing 35 people and leaving
dozens of others wounded.
This January the Council adopted a resolution demanding that Eritrea
pull its forces from the disputed area and cooperate with diplomatic
initiatives, and welcoming Djibouti's withdrawal of its forces to its
positions before the dispute.
A UN fact-finding mission sent to the region after the dispute flared
was welcomed by Djibouti but blocked by Eritrea, which refused to meet
with it or with any envoy of Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who offered
to use his good offices to help resolve the issue.
Today, Mr. Olhaye called for the row over Doumeira - which he noted is
"situated in one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world" - to be
resolved along the lines of the Council resolution, "without further
equivocation, confusion and deliberate procrastination."
"Inaction sets a dangerous precedent which others will surely follow in
the future - deny and refuse to cooperate! The Council must not appear
to be appeasing Eritrea indefinitely; this is a dangerous and an
unpredictable regime that has not shown so far any respect to
international norms and behaviour."
Exercising his right of reply, an Eritrean delegate told the Assembly
later today that his country "doesn't have territorial ambitions" and it
has not occupied land belonging to Djibouti. He also said that Djibouti
had presented a one-sided view of the situation.
Responding further, a delegate from Djibouti said Eritrea had
demonstrated a pattern of military aggression in the region since it
gained independence in 1993, and accused the country of a lack of
cooperation with any efforts to resolve the dispute over Doumeira.
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=32354
<http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=32354&Cr=general+assembly&
Cr1> &Cr=general+assembly&Cr1=
<http://www.un.org/News/dh/photos/2009/401975-djibouti.jpg>
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