The State of Eritrea
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Press Release
Four years have elapsed since Eritrea and Ethiopia signed the Comprehensive
Algiers Peace Agreement on 12 December 2000. The Algiers Peace Agreement was signed
after lengthy negotiations that were punctuated by successive Ethiopian military
offensives which claimed thousands of lives.
On the basis of the Algiers Agreement, the United Nations deployed a peace-keeping
force, UNMEE, at an annual cost of 200 million US$. Similarly, a neutral Boundary
Commission was established in January 2001 "to delimit and demarcate the colonial
treaty border based on pertinent colonial treaties (1900, 1902 and 1908) and applicable
international law."
The Boundary Commission announced its verdict on 13 April 2002 after examining
the voluminous memorials and counter memorials submitted by the parties as well
as a two-week Hearing. The Boundary Commission further issued detailed Demarcation
Directions and undertook necessary groundwork to start physical demarcation of
the Boundary. This work would have been completed in November 2003 had Ethiopia
honored its treaty obligations and cooperated with the Boundary Commission in
accordance with the explicit provisions of the Algiers Agreement. The UN peacekeeping
mission would have winded up last year, saving considerable cost to the international
community and ushering a period of peace and stability to our region. More importantly,
the humanitarian plight of 60,000 of our citizens who remain dislocated from their
home villages and towns; the opportunity cost to the peoples of Eritrea and Ethiopia
and the clouds of another unnecessary and unjustifiable confrontation would have
been removed. As we have maintained all along, the blame for this state of affairs
does not rest with Ethiopia alone. Our partners in peace have treaty and moral
obligations to persuade Ethiopia to uphold the rule of law and abide by its treaty
obligations to promote peace and stability in our region.
The Government of Eritrea thus underlines, at this propitious juncture that the
way foreword lies in Ethiopia's:
* Full and unconditional respect of the Algiers Agreement;
* Strict compliance with the Boundary Commission decision of April 13,2002;
* Withdrawal of its forces from sovereign Eritrean territories; and ,
* Cooperation with the Boundary Commission to ensure expeditious demarcation of
the Boundary.
The Government of Eritrea urges the international community to help secure peace
and stability in our region by putting pressure on Ethiopia to ensure the long
over-due demarcation of the boundary.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Asmara
12 December 2004