U.N. welcomes Eritrea, Ethiopia ‘positive steps’ towards peace

GENEVA

UN Secretary-General, António Guterres: second term support from Portugal

UN Secretary-General, António Guterres

The UN Secretary-General, Mr Antonio Guterres, has announced its readiness to support Eritrea and Ethiopia following recent peace overtures between the two neighbouring States in the Horn of Africa.

Ethiopia this month announced its readiness to accept and implement a 2002 border agreement that ended two years of bloody conflict, in which thousands died.

Without a deal, skirmishes continued at the border, with Eritrea reportedly remaining on a war-footing.

In a speech delivered this week, Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki announced plans to send a delegation to Addis Ababa “to gauge current developments directly and in depth, as well as to chart out a plan for continuous future action”.

Guterres,in a statement by his spokesperson, Stephane Dujarric, welcomed the “positive steps” taken to resolve outstanding issues regarding the normalisation of relations between the two countries.

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The UN chief also commended efforts by the leaders “to achieve sustainable peace and good-neighbourly relations which, in turn, will have positive repercussions in the entire Horn of Africa region”.

The Secretary-General underlined his readiness to provide “all support that may contribute to advancing and consolidating” engagement between the two countries.

Tens of thousands of people were killed in the two years of war between Ethiopia and Eritrea, which began in 1998 over a border dispute.

The UN deployed a peacekeeping mission to the region, whose mandate included monitoring the cessation of hostilities, providing mine action assistance and coordinating humanitarian and human rights activities.

The operation was established in 2000 and was terminated by the Security Council eight years later following “obstructions” by Eritrea that undermined the mission’s mandate.

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