I
borrowed the title for this article from page 345 of John Bolton’s book
“Surrender is not an option”. Here is an excerpt:
“…At
one point I had a USUN staffer say at a Council experts meeting that the
headline so far was “Eritrea Faces Down Security Council.”
Characteristically British deputy perm rep Adam Thomson responded protectively
that such a statement was “wounding to the Council, as indeed true
statements often are…”
Today,
it is Eritrea ’s
statements of truth that are “wounding to the Council” and it has
decided to shut Eritrea
up. I believe the title is appropriate for this piece, because, just like the US , surrender is not an option, and in defense
of its sovereignty and territorial integrity, the Government and people of Eritrea are
once again forced to face down the UN Security Council. The UN Charter is
clear, no State may use or encourage the use of economic, political or any
other type of measures to coerce another State in order to obtain from it the
subordination of the exercise of its sovereign rights, and yet today, the
United States and United Kingdom governments want to do just that. Why?
Why are
some members of the Security Council, and especially the United States , pushing for sanctions against Eritrea ? It is
really quite simple….payback. It is payback for what Washington
perceives to be Eritrea
’s “arrogance”. If we were to follow the western media and
the many orchestrated campaigns against Eritrea , it would not be hard to
find the many contentious issues that have soured US-Eritrea relations. From
USAID and NGOs in Eritrea ,
to the UN peacekeeping mission in Eritrea
and Ethiopia (UNMEE), to Washington ’s
policy in Somalia
, there is a lot that has happened. It looks like Washington
has now decided to punish Eritrea
for not toeing Washington ’s line and is
using any and all pretexts- Somalia
, Djibouti , peace and
stability in the Horn etc. etc. in pursuit of the illegal, unjust and unfair
sanctions against Eritrea
.
The
call for sanctions against Eritrea is a result of an unprecedented campaign by
Djibouti, Kenya and Uganda, all egged on by Ethiopia and the United States in a
continuation of a hostile 60-year history between the US State Department and
Eritrea. It is a culmination of several hostile acts and statements against
Eritrea
by US diplomats in the last 10 years. As if the 8-year long threats and
vilification campaigns spearheaded by incompetent and vindictive junior
diplomats in the Bush Administration, such as Jendayi E. Frazer, were not
enough, the assault continues today in the Obama Administration with Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton in the lead, Susan Rice, US Ambassador to the United
Nations, Johnny Carson, US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs and
several other US officials making unsubstantiated allegations and threats of
actions against Eritrea for exercising her sovereign rights.
Today,
I want to address one of the contentious issues that have brought US-Eritrea
relations to a head and the one issue that the US is using to rally other members
of the Security Council-who stand to loose when a lucrative peacekeeping
mission goes under. It is the issue of UNMEE, the United Nations peacekeeping
mission to Eritrea and Ethiopia . It
should be recalled that the US
had openly threatened to punish Eritrea
for not allowing the UN Mission to Eritrea
and Ethiopia (UNMEE) stationed in a 15.5-mile (25-km) zone to remain in its
territories indefinitely, as was envisioned by Kofi Anann , Ethiopia
and its handlers.
Reuters,
in its 22 April 2008 news with a glaring headline, “UN council angered at
Eritrea
over border force” reported another threat made by Alejandro Wolff,
Deputy Permanent U.S. Representative to the United Nations:
“…U.S.
envoy Alejandro Wolff said there was "a mood in the council of great,
great dissatisfaction at the manner in which Eritrea has handled this,"
and accused the Eritreans of "shooting themselves in the foot…In the
long term Eritrea will pay a big price for this misjudgment," he told
reporters, without elaborating…”
Without
addressing the merits or de-merits of peacekeeping, allow me to take a look at
the scandal-ridden UN peacekeeping mission to Eritrea
and Ethiopia
, its 8-year long tenure and its unceremonious disbanding in February of 2008.
On 18
June 2000, a Cessation of Hostilities Agreement (CHA) was signed between the
Governments of Eritrea and Ethiopia
. In accordance with the CHA, a peacekeeping mission, the United Nations
Mission to Eritrea
and Ethiopia (UNMEE) was deployed with a clear mandate. UNMEE was to monitor
the cessation of hostilities; monitor the redeployment of Ethiopian troops; and
monitor the 25,000 square kilometer temporary security zone (TSZ) established
along the Eritrea Ethiopia border, entirely on sovereign Eritrean territories.
In
addition to a clear mandate, UNMEE also had a clear end date. According to the
18 June 2000 Cessation of Hostilities Agreement signed by the Governments of
Eritrea and Ethiopia
:
“…The
Peacekeeping Mission
shall terminate when the delimitation-demarcation process of the border has
been completed …”
The
Algiers Agreement which was signed on 12 December 2000 in Algeria by H.E.
President Isaias Afwerki for Eritrea and by Prime Minister Meles Zenawi for
Ethiopia and witnessed and guaranteed by Secretary General Kofi Annan
representing the United Nations, President Abdelaziz Bouteflika of the
Democratic Republic of Algeria, President Obasanjo of Nigeria, Secretary of
State Madeleine Albright representing the United States, Secretary General,
Salim Ahmed Salim representing the OAU, and Senator Renato Serri representing
the European Union, and states that the Eritrea Ethiopia Boundary Commission
(EEBC) alone had the sole authority and mandate to delineate and demarcate the
Eritrea Ethiopia border. The EEBC delivered its delimitation decision on 13
April 2002 and its decision on the “virtual demarcation”
(demarcation by placing coordinates on maps) came on 30 November 2007.
In the
years leading up to the “virtual demarcation”, the EEBC’s
work was interrupted, not just by Ethiopia’s intransigence and
belligerence, but also by the US State Department, Jendayi E. Frazer and Kofi
Annan, who came up with several other interventions of their own. A detailed
list of Ethiopia
’s numerous obstructions to the EEBC’s work, as well as
intimidations and harassments of the Commission and its staff, can be found in
the 26 November Statement of the Commission to the Security Council. Ethiopia ,
emboldened by the diplomatic, financial, and military shield and support it
received refused to allow for the physical demarcation (pillars on the ground)
of the Eritrea Ethiopia border. Here are a few examples of the political
interventions that emboldened Ethiopia
to blatantly flout international law.
UN
Secretary General Kofi Annan interfered with the work of the Commission in a
bid to hijack its sole mandate (to delimit and demarcate the Eritrea Ethiopia
border) according to the Algiers Agreements. The first attempt by Kofi Annan to
interfere in the work of the Commission came by way of Lloyd Axworthy’s
appointment as his Special Envoy. As the record shows, in an interview with
IRIN on 5 January 2004, Axworthy exposed the true mission of his assignment by
saying:
"… The boundary commission's decision needs to be
developed…I think there is a different kind of process that may be
helpful…"
Annan
and Frazer orchestrated the very transparent “Meeting of the
Witnesses” ploy which introduced a “technical facilitator”.
Parroting the minority regime’s deceptive arguments and excuses, she
introduced General George Fulford, who she figured could serve as a
“technical facilitator” to the EEBC. He was brought in to assist
the EEBC with the drawing of a “workable boundary”. According to
Frazer’s interview on Voice of America's "Straight Talk Africa"
on 1 February 2006, “…the demarcation has to be done according to
what is just and reasonable…” Frazer also tried to introduce a
“satellite technology” map at an EEBC meeting in the spring of
2006. General Fulford “rather unwisely, wrote to Eritrea's Legal Counsel
saying that he was seeking operational latitude to shift the boundary by about
1km”, presuming to put Badme within Ethiopia.
Eritrea has since learned that the US State Department and Jendayi
E. Frazer had made several other attempts to reverse, revise and change the
EEBC’s decision. Frazer wanted Badme, the flashpoint for the conflict
that was unequivocally awarded to Eritrea , to be ruled Ethiopian.
The first revelation of Frazer’s illegal attempts came from John Bolton,
US Ambassador to the United Nations. In his recently published memoir
– “Surrender Is Not an Option: Defending America at the United
Nations and Abroad” (Threshold Editions) –Ambassador Bolton states
that in February 2006, Jendayi Frazer, Assistant Secretary of State for African
Affairs informed him that she wanted him to “reopen” the 2002 EEBC
decision.
Bolton
describes his surprise at Frazer’s position, because in January 2006, he
had gotten the Security Council to agree to a Frazer-led “ U.S.
initiative” on the border issue. Bolton
believed that the “Initiative” would focus solely on the
expeditious implementation of the Eritrea Ethiopia Boundary Commission’s
(EEBC) Final and Binding decision delivered on 13 April 2002. He was in for a
surprise. Here is what he wrote on the now infamous Page 347:
“…For reasons I never understood Frazer reversed course, and
asked in early February to reopen the 2002 decision, which she had concluded
was wrong, and award a major piece of disputed territory to Ethiopia. I was at
a loss how to explain that to the Security Council, so I didn't…”
The
recently leaked 26 June 2006 UN memo from Mr. Azouz Ennifar, Acting head of
UNMEE to Mr. Jean-Marie Guehenno, Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping
Operations also details her attempts to scuttle the demarcation process.
In
addition to refusing to take punitive actions against Ethiopia for its refusal to abide by the
EEBC’s delimitation and demarcation decisions, directives and orders, the
Security Council ignored and downplayed Ethiopia ’s numerous
violations of the Cessation of Hostilities Agreements from the get go. From the
establishment of the TSZ to the issue of direct flights and more, Ethiopia
undermined UNMEE and prevented it from fulfilling its mandate.
The
Security Council and Kofi Annan also ignored the conduct of UN peacekeepers in Eritrea . For
the record, allow me to mention the most notorious incidents, which by the way
contributed to the widely reported, but never explained “restrictions of
UNMEE’s movement in Eritrea
”. Furthermore, coupled with all the political problems associated with
the UN Mission to Eritrea
and Ethiopia , the conduct
of its peacekeepers added other grave concern to the Government and people of Eritrea . UNMEE
violated the trust of the people of Eritrea
by committing various offenses during their 8 year long stay in Eritrea . the
offenses included espionage, housing criminals, sexual abuse, prostitution,
pedophilia, murder, pornography, defacing the national currency, prostitution,
human trafficking and more.
Despite
the often repeated and widely distributed lies about UNMEE and its mission, the
reasons for its failure and subsequent disbanding rests solely with the UN, US
and Ethiopia. On Page 344 of his book, John Bolton writes about Ethiopia
’s refusal to comply with the Algiers Agreements and UNMEE. He wrote:
“…The
Security Council, after three years of watching the grass grow, should now
determine whether both parties were still prepared to adhere to their
commitments. If so, then demarcation should proceed, or if not, it was time to
terminate UNMEE, which was simply propping up Ethiopia ’s flat out
violation of its commitments…”
In the
end, UNMEE had become an occupation force. It was occupying fertile Eritrean
territories in the Gash Barka region of Eritrea
, Eritrea ’s bread
basket and was hindering Eritrea
’s development and efforts for ensuring food security.
In
February 2008, a couple of weeks before Ban Ki Moon´s and the UN’s
unilateral decision to "relocate UNMEE to Ethiopia", the Secretary
General and the Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) orchestrated a
two-week long defamation and vilification campaign against the Government and
people of Eritrea in order to justify UNMEE´s "relocation to
Ethiopia". Citing flimsy and exaggerated pretexts such as "Eritrea
cuts fuel to UNMEE", "Eritrea refused to allow food delivery"
etc. etc. hoping to garner public sympathy, without ever consulting Eritrea, or
getting permission to cross Eritrea’s international borders, acting like
thieves in the night, Moon and his cohorts in Ethiopia decided to move UNMEE
equipment and personnel across the Eritrea Ethiopia border on 13 February 2008.
The decision to "temporarily relocate" UNMEE troops from Eritrea to Ethiopia
, which led to its eventual disbandment, was done through closed consultations
between the UN Secretary-General and Meles Zenawi, the leader of the minority
regime in Ethiopia
, on the fringes of the AU summit at the end January 2008. Eritrea was kept in the dark about this decision
until the day earlier before the UN troops had completed their preparations to
cross the border to Ethiopia
. As it happened, the UN informed Eritrea
through the 12 February 2008 "Note Verbale" regarding the relocation
to Ethiopia
that was scheduled to take place in the morning of 13 February 2008. UNMEE was
also relocating to sovereign Eritrean territories still under Ethiopian
occupation and the Eritrean Foreign Ministry expressed its concerns and more in
its 5 March 2008 Press Release:
"…The UNMEE Force Commander (FC) further informed Eritrean
Government authorities in Asmara that relocation would be for the contingent on
sector west to move to Badme; from the center to Zalambesa and from the east to
Bure. The FC had no answer when asked how they could contemplate moving troops
to Badme if this was relocation to Ethiopia . The UN Department of
Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) later denied and retracted the
information…The Government of Eritrea was not provided in advance with
the plan for the movement, handling of the Mission's heavy equipment and other
necessary details…"
My European sources in Asmara tell me that the
US Embassy in Asmara circulated malicious and
erroneous rumors amongst the diplomatic core about Eritrea confiscating UNMEE’s
equipments, which the western media was only too happy to disseminate without
any verification. On 30 July 2008, the Security Council unanimously adopted
resolution 1827 terminating the mandate of the United Nations Mission in Ethiopia and
Eritrea (UNMEE), because it could not justify its continued presence on
sovereign Eritrean territories. According to the UN, equipment from the United
Nations Mission in Ethiopia
and Eritrea (UNMEE), including 400 accommodation units were deployed in Mogadishu in support of AMISOM, following the liquidation
of that operation in Eritrea
.
If the US led Security
Council is angry about UNMEE’s unceremonious disbandment, it has only
itself to blame. Had it enforced its decisions and resolutions enforced the
EEBC decision and international law, the UN Mission would have been a success
and the people of Eritrea
and Ethiopia
would have been living in peace within their internationally recognized
borders.
Finally,
the Security Council does not have the right to punish Eritrea for
exercising its sovereign rights which are protected under the UN Charter. The
US and Eritrea may have had , and may continue to have, many political
differences, but that does not give the US the moral or legal right to use the
Security Council as a bully pulpit to subordinate Eritrea’s sovereignty,
security, stability and development in order to advance its own interests in
the region.
The
rule of law must prevail over the law of the jungle!